Is the New York criminal investigation into ex-president Donald Trump over or ongoing? The Manhattan district attorney yesterday made a rare public statement about the status of the probe which has been in doubt since the lead prosecutors on the case quit back in February.The DA, Alvin Bragg Jr., told CNN on Thursday that his office is still following up evidence and pursuing leads in the investigation despite resignations of Carey Dunne and Mark Pomerantz, two prosecutors who quit over what they thought was Braggโs disinterest in actually charging Trump. Pomerantzโs blistering resignation letterโin which he detailed the beef between he and Bragg over whether Trump should be charged with felonies related to his company (hell yes, Pomerantz said)โwas leaked last month. With Braggโs top men on the case walking off the job and Bragg reportedly having halted a grand juryโs work on the probe, it appeared the case against Trump was going nowhere. Not true, Bragg now says.
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From CNN
โWe are every day following up on new evidence that weโve secured,โ Alvin Bragg Jr. told CNN in an interview. โInvestigations are not linear so we are following the leads in front of us. Thatโs what weโre doing. ... The investigation is very much ongoing.โ
The comments from Bragg, a former federal prosecutor and assistant New York attorney general, are aimed at ending speculation that he has shut down the long-running investigation and comes six weeks after the prosecutors departed and Trumpโs lawyers all but declared victory.
Bragg said he wanted the public to understand that heโs restrained from discussing โthe meatโ of the investigation but he said when itโs over he will inform the public about his conclusion โ whether itโs an indictment or closing the case without charges.
He didnโt comment on Pomerantzโs letter, which accused Bragg of betraying the publicโs interest by not giving the OK to formally charge Trump.Braggโs interview might have been aimed at reassuring the public that his office isnโt going soft on Trump. It might be damage control for a DA dealing with the Trump case, an uptick in violent crime while also managing reform policies in New Yorkโs criminal justice system. They may have also been a sincere, straightforward answer from a prosecutor who doesnโt yet believe the case is ready for trial, or whether it ever will be.Either way, his comments opened more questions than they closed. Did Bragg actually shut down grand jury interviews and explicitly tell Pomerantz and Dunne they couldnโt charge Trump? Doing so wouldnโt make sense in the context of an investigation that Bragg now says will follow the evidence wherever it leads, unless Bragg has a vastly different opinion of where the evidence is leading than the resigned prosecutors (which is precisely what theyโve said since quitting). If his office is still examining evidence, whoโs taking the lead now that Pomerantz and Dunne are out of the picture? Isnโt examining evidence to determine whether charges can be filed exactly what a grand jury is for? Outside of Bragg it seems almost everybody investigating Trump is ready to take action. New York Attorney General Letitia James, whose civil investigation of Trump could refer any evidence of criminal wrongdoing it uncovers to Braggโs office, now wants Trump held in contempt and fined $10,000 for every day the former president refuses to turn over requested documents. A federal judge who ruled last month that a Trump attorney had to turn over a trove of emails to the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, riot said in his ruling that itโs โmore likely than notโ that Trump committed multiple felonies by goading the insurrectionists on. His opinion, though, couldnโt impact whether or not Trump is charged with a federal crime; that would be up to the Justice Department.
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