RAW STORY
While much of the recent attention surrounding Katrina Pierson has
focused on her bullet necklace, the national spokesperson for Donald
Trump’s presidential campaign has also come under scrutiny for both
improperly claiming unemployment benefits and pushing the “Agenda 21”
conspiracy theory.
According to the National Journal,
Pierson received $11,440 in benefits between 2012 and 2013, when she
did volunteer work for Sen. Ted Cruz’s (R-TX) run for office. However,
state rules that anyone receiving unemployment should actively looking
for a paid position while doing so.
The Texas Observer reported last year that in 2011, Pierson led classes for Waco Tea Party members warning them about “Agenda 21,”
a popular conservative conspiracy theory claiming that a nonbinding
plan approved by United Nations officials in 1992 was really a vehicle
for the organization to seize control of the US.
Pierson told the Observer that she led similar discussions
in Arizona, Washington D.C., Kansas and several other states and
considered it her full-time job, arguing that “[when] you realize that
you’ve been lied to your whole life, it’s an eye-opening experience.”
The Journal also noted that Pierson turned against Rep. Trey
Gowdy (R-SC) for supporting Sen. Marco Rubio’s (R-FL) bid for the GOP
nomination, just two months after publicly praising him to fellow Tea
Party supporters.
Pierson complained on Twitter that Gowdy “lost all credibility
when he nominated John Boehner for Speaker so he’s perfect for Marco
Rubio.” But on Oct. 26, an email in Pierson’s name went out
seeking help “drafting” Gowdy to become House Speaker, despite the fact
that Gowdy stated he was not interested in the position.
“These outside groups use members’ names, not just his, without their
knowledge and mislead people to think they support or are connected to a
group when they are not,” a spokesperson for Gowdy said after reading
the email.
Pierson joined Trump’s campaign two weeks after that email was sent.
In May Wildstein pled guilty to felonies arising from the September
2013 George Washington Bridge lane closures, at which time prosecutors
disclosed that he was cooperating with the government in the prosecution
of Baroni and Kelly.
The two defendants’ discovery motions, filed in the early hours of
Wednesday morning, total several hundred pages in length. Here’s a brief
rundown of the legal highlights:
1. Bill Baroni is seeking a change of venue because of pretrial
publicity and press coverage. In all likelihood, this request will not
be granted and his trial will take place in Newark, New Jersey.
2. Both Baroni and Bridget Anne Kelly are seeking the names of
unindicted co-conspirators and allege that the government has withheld
potentially exculpatory evidence from discovery.
3. They also allege that the law firm retained by Governor Christie’s
office at public expense, Gibson Dunn Crutcher – remember the Mastro
Report? – produced files that are, in the words of Kelly’s attorney,
“not only unsearchable… [but] also randomly produced in massive PDF
files that prevent counsel from effectively reviewing or organizing”
them.
Remember that Gibson Dunn partner Randy Mastro led an internal
investigation that ‘exonerated’ Governor Christie from any wrongdoing in
the lane closures. The firm is not only fighting to make sure nobody
sees notes gathered during interviews conducted with Christie staffers
to produce the Mastro Report; they’re also turning over subpoenaed
documents to prosecutors and defense lawyers in the form of ginormous
gigabyte-sized PDF files that might as well have been sorted and
organized by the Collyer brothers.
4. Defense lawyers also allege that Gibson Dunn is aggressively
blocking the disclosure of emails, calendars, and documents from the
governor’s office that they have a right to see. There is, for example,
not a single email from Chris Christie’s official email account included
in the 1.7 million documents being reviewed in this case. Some emails
from the governor’s personal account were not produced by Gibson Dunn,
either, and only came to light because they were disclosed by other
parties. Mastro and his team have asserted privilege over nearly 9,500
emails and documents, including sixteen emails between Christie aides
and either Wildstein or Baroni.
THE PURLOINED HARD DRIVE
The motion filed by Bill Baroni, who is actively working alongside
his attorneys as he prepares for an April trial date, opens with the
eye-popping revelation that David Wildstein, the former director of
interstate capital projects at the Port Authority and onetime high
school friend of Governor Christie, “stole” Baroni’s hard drive shortly
before he was forced to leave the agency in December 2013.
Baroni only learned that the drive was in the hands of prosecutors in
August through a discovery letter. It had been replaced when he and
Wildstein were working at the Port Authority, and the two decided to
keep it since it contained sensitive political information. At some
point, Wildstein pocketed it, and when he left the Port Authority he
took it with him – even as he left behind family photos, “rare books,”
and other personal effects.
Wildstein had long been prepared to lose his lucrative job at the
agency; just after the lane closures became public he mentioned bringing
empty boxes to work in case he was suddenly fired. It was not hard to
guess that he left the agency with files of some kind as an insurance
policy against future prosecution; his attorney said in January 2014
that he was prepared to disclose evidence about the lane closures in
exchange for an immunity deal.
It is notable that Wildstein took the hard drive with him during a
time when it would have certainly been covered by a subpoena issued to
the Port Authority and its officials by New Jersey lawmakers
investigating the lane closures.
A request for comment from the chairman of the committee conducting
that investigation, N.J. Assemblyman John Wisniewski, has not yet been
answered.
THE CANCELED MEETINGS
Along with closing toll lanes at the George Washington Bridge to
allegedly punish Fort Lee mayor Mark Sokolich for not endorsing
Christie’s 2013 re-election, prosecutors point to the summer 2013
cancellation of meetings that had been been scheduled between officials
in the Christie Administration and the Port Authority at the request of
Jersey City’s Democratic mayor Steve Fulop. Fulop, too had declined to
endorse Christie’s re-election. Subsequently, the governor’s office and
the Port Authority canceled a series of meetings that had been scheduled
with Fulop.
Prosecutors have blamed Baroni and Kelly for the cancellations,
drawing a comparison to that event and the subsequent events at the
bridge.
But evidence revealed in the defense filings shows that Chris
Christie knew and approved of those meeting cancellations because he did
not want to upset one of Fulop’s rivals: the Democratic president of
New Jersey’s state senate, Steve Sweeney.
According to Baroni’s filing, he was simply acting at the governor’s behest in the interest of good government.
Moreover, according to an email chain that led from Fulop to Christie,
David Wildstein and Christie’s re-election campaign manager Bill Stepien
seem to have been the primary conduits of political intelligence to the
governor rather than Baroni or Kelly. Other Bridgegate emails revealed a
similar dynamic, suggesting that Baroni had very few, if any, direct
lines of communication with Trenton that did involve Wildstein or Port
Authority chairman David Samson as an intermediaries.
THE TWO MEMOS AND THE BIG RED FLAG
Baroni’s filing also reveals that officials representing New York’s
interests at the Port Authority conducted a discreet private
investigation into Bridgegate and likely communicated their findings to
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo.
In late 2013, Port Authority Vice-Chairman Scott Rechler – a New York
appointee to the agency’s board – and David Garten, his assistant
inside the agency, went outside the agency’s bylaws to run their own
informal investigation. After talking with employees and scouring
electronic calendars and correspondence, Garten concluded that Wildstein
had “bullied, intimidated, and lied” to people involved in the lane
closure operation, “perhaps even Baroni.” In a memo with a subheading of
“Big Red Flag – Potential Smoking Gun,” Garten identified Wildstein as
the lead actor in the lane closures based on emails he found – not Bill
Baroni.
Garten also concluded that Baroni’s testimony to the New Jersey
legislature about the existence of a traffic study – testimony that has
largely been debunked – was at least partly true because the agency had
indeed collected traffic data. Baroni was “somewhat correct in his
testimony,” Garten wrote.
This piece of evidence is important because one of the charges that
prosecutors in the U.S. Attorney’s office leveled against Baroni was
that he “provided false and misleading testimony” to New Jersey
lawmakers during his appearance. If, however, Baroni’s testimony was
judged to be partly true, and misleading primarily because of
misdirection and intimidation by Wildstein, it complicates charges in
the first count of the indictment against him relating to a conspiracy
to defraud the government.
The correspondence from Garten to Rechler also reveals that
appointees and staff representing the New York side of the bi-state Port
Authority were eager to repair their relationship with Governor Cuomo.
It is already well known that Port Authority Executive Director Patrick
Foye, a New York appointee, had a strained relationship with Cuomo. The
Wall Street Journal reported in December 2013 that Chris Christie
reached out to Andrew Cuomo by phone to ask him to restrain Foye’s probe
of Bridgegate, and it is widely believed that Cuomo cooperated in doing
so.
According to evidence in Baroni’s filing, David Garten suggested to
Scott Rechler that Patrick Foye write a memo to the governor explaining
their Bridgegate findings. This memo, Garten wrote, would hopefully
“build good will between Pat and the governor.”
But it would not be for anyone else’s eyes.
Garten suggested that Foye write the memo from his home computer,
print out a single physical copy, and send it to “the second floor” –
shorthand for Cuomo’s office on the second floor of the
lavishly-detailed state capital building in Albany. He then suggested
that Foye write another more bland version, a “general memo,” that would
be kept by the agency “in case we get subpoenaed.”
Yes, you read that right. Gartner and the Port Authority
vice-chairman agreed in a now-subpoenaed email on a plan to write two
memos: one for Cuomo, a former state attorney general, drafted on a home
computer to dodge record retention laws and future disclosure to
federal prosecutors, and another for the agency’s official files “in
case we get subpoenaed.”
Rechler supported this idea and reported that Foye also agreed with
the strategy. He wrote that he was going to ask Cuomo aide Howard Glaser
(“HG”) for his thoughts on the matter.
The Port Authority today denied that Foye ever followed through with this plan.
THE MISSING CALENDAR AND EMAILS
The bulk of last night’s filings deals with the amount of evidence –
or lack thereof – produced by government prosecutors and the firm hired
by the Christie Administration to represent it in Bridgegate and other
related investigations. That firm, Gibson Dunn, has had a team of white
collar criminal defense lawyers led by partner Randy Mastro working
under an agreement with the N.J. Attorney General’s office since early
2014.
According to defense lawyers, Mastro’s team has aggressively kept
documents from being disclosed and made a mess of what files they have
turned over. They have, for example, redacted Christie’s calendar during
the August 2013 week that the “time for some traffic problems” email
was sent by Bridget Kelly to David Wildstein.
Why? Anybody’s guess.
An un-redacted version of that calendar obtained from another source
makes clear that there was no obvious legal basis for Gibson Dunn to
withhold its contents. During the week in question, Governor Christie
did things like make a phone call to Neil Bush and meet with lobbyist
Jeff Michaels, whose brother Thomas ‘Chip’ Michaels, was a Port
Authority police lieutenant assigned to the George Washington Bridge in
September 2013.
Gibson Dunn has also withheld sixteen emails Baroni and Wildstein exchanged with aides in Christie’s office.
Moreover, they’ve turned over to the government and to defense
attorneys a set of documents that are so disorganized that, according to
people familiar with the files, they are unlike any professionally
collected legal materials they have ever seen. In their current form,
defense filings say, Christie’s lawyers have produced material that is
simply not usable.
This is not the first time Gibson Dunn has been accused of dumping a
seemingly deliberately impenetrable set of records on parties in a case
relating to the Port Authority. Baroni and his attorneys note in their
filing that in a 2013 New York case where Gibson Dunn represented the
agency, a federal magistrate ordered the firm to be more specific after
deciding that lawyers had handed over a “deficient” record of privilege
assertions. According to Baroni’s filing, Gibson Dunn’s initial
privilege log in that case “bears striking similarity” to the one they
produced in the Bridgegate case on behalf of Gov. Christie’s office.
(The New York case is Automobile Club of New York v. Port Authority, 297
F.R.D. 55, S.D.N.Y. 2013.)
Without ability to force Gibson Dunn to organize the files they’ve
turned over on behalf of Governor Christie under a taxpayer-funded
contract with the New Jersey state attorney general’s office, Baroni
claims he cannot be ready for the trial set to begin in April 2016 after
initially being scheduled for this month. “Missing documents,
incomplete privilege and redaction logs, spurious privilege assertions,
the lack of any action by the prosecution” all affect documents that “go
directly to the allegations” against him, Baroni writes.
DID CHRISTIE TESTIFY?
Other outlets have pointed to this part of Baroni’s filing as
evidence that Governor Christie testified before the federal grand jury
in this case.
But it isn’t confirmation; the defense is simply using boilerplate
language to ask for a transcript of a grand jury appearance if it
exists, but without knowing for certain whether it does.
We already know that Christie was visited at his official residence
by prosecutors and federal agents in 2014. The governor’s office has not
yet responded to calls seeking confirmation, and federal rules
governing criminal prosecutions make it somewhat tricky for him to do
so.
Without such confirmation or a disclosure by prosecutors, we don’t
know if Christie has had any subsequent meetings with prosecutors.
SCHOOL DAYS
Finally, in a passage that is currently redacted pending government
review, Baroni’s filing suggests that there exists exculpatory evidence
showing that he did not chose September 9, 2013 as the date to start
George Washington Bridge lane closings because it was the first day of
school in Fort Lee and would therefore cause massive traffic disruptions
in town.
And here…
For what it’s worth, fingering Baroni as the mastermind behind this
calendar choice has never made sense to me. Baroni does not have
children and was not living in New Jersey at the time. Why would he be
intuitively aware of the logistical nightmares that could be unleashed
on that particular day? In fact, why would he know when the first day of
school was?
Think about it: unless you’re a teacher or a parent or someone who
spends time dreaming up elaborate revenge scenarios involving traffic,
how many of you know the calendar of your nearest public schools?
A few final thoughts:
* I’ve always been in an odd position in reporting on this story
because of my connections, professional and personal, to the people
involved. They’re human beings like us, and we all have the same
propensities toward fallibility.
After reading this material, it strikes me that the government’s
reliance on David Wildstein as a star witness is going to be a problem.
Beyond the missing hard drive – a mind-boggling yet not entirely
surprising revelation – my sense is that there’s more to come that will
call his credibility into question. The government’s chain of custody
for any evidence taken from Baroni’s hard drive will be nearly
impossible to establish since Wildstein secretly snuck it out of the
Port Authority when it was sought under a state subpoena. Even if that
ends up being a non-issue, it still may be hard to convince a jury that
the George Washington Bridge lane closures were the sole work of Bill
Baroni and Bridget Anne Kelly based on what we are starting to see in
these filings.
* Remember David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman and Christie consigliere?
I haven’t written about him in quite awhile because he’s all but
disappeared. That does not seem to be an accident, and at this point it
is entirely reasonable to assume that Samson is cooperating with
prosecutors. Whether that means certain legal trouble for Chris Christie
is unclear, but do not forget that a U.S. Attorney appointed by a
Democratic president would necessarily be reluctant to publicly move
against a Republican governor who is in the midst of a presidential run.
Politics can dictate timing.
Christie’s never gonna be president now, but until he's actually out of the race we won't know how much he has to worry about.
Brian Murphy is a TPM contributing editor and Baruch College
history professor who writes about the intersection of money and
politics. He is the author of Building the Empire State: Political
Economy in Early America. He can be reached at
brian@talkingpointsmemo.com and you can follow him on Twitter @Burrite.