Times-Call (Longmont)

Revived Trump probe puts Manhattan DA back in spotlight

- By Michael R. Sisak The Associated Press

NEW YORK >> When Alvin Bragg became Manhattan’s first Black district attorney last year, one of his first big decisions was to tap the brakes on an investigat­ion that had been speeding toward a likely criminal case against former President Donald Trump.

The move won him few friends. Exasperate­d liberals dreaming of Trump in handcuffs threw up their hands. Conservati­ves gloated that the Democrat’s hesitation to bring a charge was proof Trump had been investigat­ed for political reasons.

A year later, Bragg is shaking up that first impression.

Fresh from winning a conviction against Trump’s family company for tax fraud, Bragg convened a new grand jury last week in a reinvigora­ted investigat­ion that could lead to the first ever criminal charges against a former U.S. president.

The probe, lately focused on hush money payments made to two women in 2016, is one of several legal challenges Trump faces as he seeks a return to the White House. It is putting Bragg back in the spotlight after a grueling first year in office.

“We’re going to follow the facts and continue to do our job,” Bragg said, speaking broadly about the investigat­ion in a recent interview with The Associated Press.

Asked if charging Trump was a real possibilit­y, or if the former president could rest easy, Bragg replied: “I’m not going to tell anyone how to rest.”

Bragg came into office 13 months ago amid what he calls a “perfect storm” of rising crime and political pressure. A Harvard-educated former federal prosecutor, chief deputy state attorney general and civil rights lawyer, he came equipped with legal and management credential­s, but not much experience navigating New York City politics.

He campaigned as a progressiv­e reformer, but one with a strong record as a prosecutor, and won an eight-way party primary before soaring to victory with 83% of the vote in deep-blue Manhattan.

Yet he got off to a rocky start. Shortly after taking office, he wrote a “Day One” memo for his staff that outlined his philosophy on prosecutin­g — or not prosecutin­g — certain crimes. Among other things, it said the district attorney would no longer prosecute some low-level misdemeano­r crimes, including subway fare evasion and marijuana possession.

Republican­s, and some centrist Democrats, pounced.

Bragg, they said, was soft on crime. New York’s police commission­er said Bragg’s intention not to prosecute some people accused of resisting arrest would invite violence against police officers.

U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin, a Republican running for governor, campaigned partly on a promise to remove the independen­tly elected Bragg from office. He also featured Bragg in a campaign ad, even though Bragg wasn’t even on the ballot.

The vitriol became so rancid — and sometimes racist — Bragg said his friends worried for his safety.

But Bragg, an old-school lawyer, was hesitant to push back publicly, something he now regrets.

“I’ve learned that the work doesn’t always speak for itself,” said Bragg, who’s been appearing more on TV and giving interviews to outlets as varied as Teen Vogue and Manhattan’s West Side Rag.

He likened Zeldin’s TV attack ad to an infamous “Willie Horton” commercial that aired in the 1980s in support of George H.W. Bush’s presidenti­al campaign. That ad featured a Black prison inmate who committed violent crimes while on a weekend leave as part of a program authorized by Bush’s Democratic rival, former Massachuse­tts Gov. Michael Dukakis.

“If someone wants to have substantiv­e discussion, we can have that,”

Bragg told the AP. “But if someone wants to put a Black face in an ad and have Willie Horton-type fears raised, we don’t have time for that.”

While some types of crime increased in Manhattan during Bragg’s first year in office, the number of homicides and shootings actually dropped.

Inside the district attorney’s office, Bragg faced dissent over the direction of the Trump investigat­ion — grievances that are being aired anew in a book by a former prosecutor.

In 2021, Bragg’s predecesso­r, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., had authorized top deputies to seek an indictment on charges that Trump had exaggerate­d the worth of his assets in financial statements he gave to lenders. A grand jury had been collecting evidence. Vance retired before the case was finished, leaving the decision about whether to go forward to Bragg.

Bragg decided not to proceed immediatel­y, citing concerns about the strength of the case.

The delay prompted two prosecutor­s leading the investigat­ion to resign.

One of them, Mark Pomerantz, has written about his disagreeme­nt with Bragg in a new book, “People vs. Donald Trump: An Inside Account.” In it, Pomerantz outlines his case for charging Trump and laments Bragg’s decision not to pursue an indictment.

Bragg countered in a statement that, in his assessment, “Pomerantz’s plane wasn’t ready for takeoff.”

Bragg also took issue with Pomerantz’s criticism of his prosecutio­n team. “It is appalling that he insulted the skill and profession­alism of our prosecutor­s,” he said at an event this week. “We have the most outstandin­g lawyers in the country working every day in the Manhattan DA’S office to keep our city safe from the streets to the suites.”

Lately, those lawyers have again been turning up the heat on Trump.

On Dec. 6 they won a conviction against the

Trump Organizati­on for helping the company’s former chief financial officer, Allen Weisselber­g, and other executives avoid paying personal income taxes. The company got a $1.6 million fine. Weisselber­g pleaded guilty and got jail time. He qualifies for release in April.

And a new grand jury is hearing evidence related to payments made in 2016 to two women who alleged they had sexual encounters with Trump.

Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, has already served prison time in connection with those payments after pleading guilty to campaign finance crimes. He has said the Trump Organizati­on reimbursed him for one of the payouts and rewarded him with extra pay disguised as reimbursem­ent for legal services.

Bragg declined to discuss the investigat­ion in detail, but said prosecutor­s had paused certain aspects of the probe until the Trump Organizati­on trial was finished. The verdict was a green light to get back to work.

“The trial is sort strong demarcatio­n for us,” Bragg said.

With that, the Manhattan investigat­ion is suddenly back on the list of potential legal perils for Trump.

In Fulton County, Georgia, the district attorney is investigat­ing Trump’s alleged interferen­ce in that state during the 2020 election. The U.S. Department of Justice is investigat­ing Trump’s storage of classified documents at his Mara-lago club and residence in Florida and the former president’s role in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Trump has lashed out at Bragg and Pomerantz on social media, calling the district attorney’s investigat­ion “fake,” “weak,” and “fatally flawed.”

“THE BIGGEST PROBLEM THEY HAD WITH THE “CASE” IS THAT I DID NOTHING WRONG!” he said in one recent post.

But now, a year later, Bragg and his team might have other thoughts. of a line

 ?? JULIA NIKHINSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg exits the courtroom after the jury found the Trump Organizati­on guilty on all counts in a criminal tax fraud case Dec. 6, 2022, in New York. After a challengin­g first year in office, Manhattan’s district attorney is back in the spotlight with a reinvigora­ted investigat­ion of former President Donald Trump.
JULIA NIKHINSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg exits the courtroom after the jury found the Trump Organizati­on guilty on all counts in a criminal tax fraud case Dec. 6, 2022, in New York. After a challengin­g first year in office, Manhattan’s district attorney is back in the spotlight with a reinvigora­ted investigat­ion of former President Donald Trump.

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