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News / Nation & World

N.J. Democrats set to combine traffic jam probes

The Columbian
Published: January 26, 2014, 4:00pm
2 Photos
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie addresses a gathering at the Dudley Family School in Camden, N.J., on Jan.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie addresses a gathering at the Dudley Family School in Camden, N.J., on Jan. 23. Photo Gallery

TRENTON, N.J. — New Jersey Democrats will pool their resources by merging separate legislative investigations into allegations that Republican Gov. Chris Christie’s aides blocked traffic lanes near a heavily traveled bridge to create backups in a nearby town as political payback.

The state Assembly and Senate planned to vote Monday to establish a joint bipartisan committee with power to subpoena people and correspondence related to the lane closings and abuse of power allegations. Chicago lawyer Reid Schar will serve as special counsel to the panel of eight Democrats and four Republicans.

“This is the optimal approach to ensuring the people of New Jersey get the answers they need to these questions about the abuse of government power,” said Assembly Speaker Vincent Prieto, whose transportation committee was further along in its probe than a parallel effort in the Senate.

The U.S. attorney’s office stepped up a criminal investigation of the matter with subpoenas to the Christie for Governor re-election campaign and the state GOP, and probably others last week.

The resolution creating the special committee is almost certain to be approved, though Republicans in both chambers are expected to press the Democrat-led Legislature for input before future subpoenas are issued and for equal access to documents.

Twenty subpoenas issued by the Assembly panel remain pending and are due back next week.

Those reach deep into the governor’s office, the re-election effort and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the agency that runs the George Washington Bridge, which the traffic lanes lead to.

The resolution cites the gravity of the issues exposed in the traffic scandal and says that makes it “fitting for the Legislature through an appropriate committee to further investigate all aspects of the finances, operations, and management of the Port Authority and any other matter raising concerns about abuse of government power or an attempt to conceal an abuse of government power.”

No subpoenas target Christie himself, a possible 2016 presidential candidate who has just begun a yearlong chairmanship of the Republican Governors Association. The governor has said he was not involved in the planning or execution of the scheme, which appears to have been authorized by his deputy chief of staff, Bridget Kelly, and carried out by his No. 2 man at the bridge agency, David Wildstein.

Kelly has been fired and Wildstein resigned.

Two other Christie confidantes also were let go: His top deputy at the Port Authority, Bill Baroni, resigned after telling a legislative panel the lane closings were for a traffic pattern study, and two-time campaign manager Bill Stepien was told to step aside after he appeared to gloat over the traffic chaos in private emails released during the investigation.

Christie, who has a reputation for engendering loyalty and insisting on discipline among his subordinates, explained at a December news conference that he learned of his aides’ involvement when the subpoenaed emails were published.

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