Search
Close this search box.

Unanimous Supreme Court Throws Out ‘Bridgegate’ Convictions


The Supreme Court on Thursday threw out the convictions of two political insiders involved in New Jersey’s “Bridgegate” scandal, saying that “not every corrupt act by state or local officials is a federal crime.”

The court said in a unanimous decision Thursday that the government had overreached in prosecuting two allies of then-New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Bridget Kelly and Bill Baroni, for their roles in a political payback scheme that created massive traffic jam to punish a Democratic mayor who refused to endorse the Republican’s reelection. Kelly was Christie’s onetime deputy chief of staff. Baroni was a top Christie appointee to the Port Authority, the operator of the New York area’s bridges, tunnels, airports and ports.

Kelly and Baroni were convicted of fraud and conspiracy for scheming in 2013 to change the traffic flow onto the George Washington Bridge between New York City and New Jersey to artificially create gridlock in New Jersey’s Fort Lee. The traffic change came after Fort Lee’s mayor declined to endorse Christie.

“For no reason other than political payback, Baroni and Kelly used deception to reduce Fort Lee’s access lanes to the George Washington Bridge — and thereby jeopardized the safety of the town’s residents. But not every corrupt act by state or local officials is a federal crime. Because the scheme here did not aim to obtain money or property, Baroni and Kelly could not have violated the federal-program fraud or wire fraud laws,” Justice Elena Kagan wrote for the court.

The result of the lane realignment was four days of traffic jams. A fictitious traffic study was used as cover for the change, but prosecutors said the real motive was political payback. At one point, Kelly wrote in an email: “Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee.”

Christie has denied knowing about the plan for gridlock ahead of time or as it was unfolding. Trial testimony contradicted his account, but the scandal helped derail his 2016 presidential bid.

Kelly was weeks from beginning a 13-month sentence last year when the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case. Baroni had begun serving his 18-month sentence but was released from prison after the high court agreed to weigh in.

The court’s decision to side with Kelly and Baroni continues a pattern from recent years of restricting the government’s ability to prosecute corruption cases.

In 2016 the court overturned the bribery conviction of former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell. In 2010 the court sharply curbed prosecutors’ use of an anti-fraud law in the case of ex-Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling.

(AP)



4 Responses

  1. Kelly & Baroni ought counter-sue NJ state for false imprisonment, and for all their legal significant expenses and mental torture.

  2. Good. This has been a corrupt pattern for of federal prosecutors inventing crimes that don’t exist, to make a name for themselves and punish their ideological enemies. Conrad Black went to prison for nothing. Arthur Andersen was destroyed — a company worth hundreds of millions was utterly destroyed, rendered worthless, effectively murdered, when it had committed no crime at all. All because of prosecutors who invent new crimes and persuade courts to pretend they exist.

  3. To: 147 & Milhouse Inc.

    All the Supreme court said is that they did not violate a FEDERAL crime. What they did agree was that they maliciously violated the towns resident’s rights to reasonable use of public roadways (regardless of if that is a crime or not) , “and thereby jeopardized the safety of the town’s residents”.

    I hope they are ‘recharged’ and and maybe sued for tort, etc. by the Fort Lee residents. I don’t understand why guys are so happy seeing two CRIMINALS get a ‘Get Out of Jail Free’ card based on some legal technicalities.

  4. Lamdan, I am happy that another fanatical federal prosecutor has been put in his place. As I pointed out this is one of many examples of federal prosecutors deciding to be superheroes by MAKING UP crimes that do not exist, and persecuting rather than prosecuting. The Supreme Court has been trying to put a lid on it for a long time, but evidently without success, as we see that it still happens.

    I am not at all concerned about what actual crimes these people may or may not have committed. I suspect there are no crimes, even at the state level, but that’s not the point. The point is that they were innocent of the federal charges, because the laws they were supposed to have broken don’t exist. To these prosecutors that’s a mere technicality. They know their victims are bad people and they are good people, so they are filled with moral outrage and determined to get them, regardless of what the law may say.

    By the way Rudy Giuliani was the same way. Which is why I never liked him.

Leave a Reply


Popular Posts