An internal review of the George Washington Bridge lane closure plot that has been plaguing New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has cleared the Republican of any wrongdoing.
But there are a few caveats. Christie himself commissioned the report from Gibson Dunn & Crutcher, a law firm that has known ties to the governor. And Christie’s lawyers were unable to interview three key people at the center of the scandal: Port Authority of New York and New Jersey executive David Wildstein, Chrsitie deputy chief of staff Bridget Kelly and the governor’s former campaign manager Bill Stepien.
The report also contained a bombshell claim — that Wildstein said he mentioned the lane closures to Christie, who has long denied any knowledge of the plot.
“Wildstein even suggested he mentioned the traffic issue in Fort Lee to the Governor at a public event during the lane realignment—a reference that the Governor does not recall and, even if actually made, would not have registered with the Governor in any event because he knew nothing about this decision in advance and would not have considered another traffic issue at one of the bridges or tunnels to be memorable,” said the report.
The executive summary of the report concludes that Wildstein and Kelly knowingly participated in the plan “at least in part, for some ulterior motive to target Mayor Sokolich” of Fort Lee, a town on the New Jersey side of the bridge that suffered crippling traffic jams during the September lane closures. But it also found that while Stepien and Bill Baroni, then the deputy executive director of the Port Authority, knew of the idea in advance, they did not know of any ulterior motive and were under the impression it was for a traffic study.
Randy Mastro—the lawyer leading the team who conducted the internal review – called the report “thorough and exhaustive.”
“We found that Gov. Christie had no knowledge beforehand … and that he played no role whatsoever in that decision or the implementation of it,” Mastro told reporters from his New York City office. He added that there’s “no evidence that anyone in the governor’s office besides Bridget Kelly knew of this idea in advance.”
Wildstein, according to Mastro, is the person who “originated and orchestrated the idea” and that he went to Kelly for approval. Kelly then “lied to her colleagues” and even reached out to a subordinate to destroy a potentially incriminating document.
Mastro said that there is no evidence that Kelly and Wildstein orchestrated the act to punish Sokolich because he did not endorse Christie during his re-election campaign in 2013.
“What motivated this act is not yet clear,” the report says.
When asked by reporters about the fact that the review was ordered by Christie’s administration, Mastro said his team of lawyers has an “obligation to a public office,” adding, “had we found evidence to the contrary to what we found, we would have been reporting on that.” He added that his team has no incentive to mislead the public because there are other open investigations into the matter.
“We will be judged at the end of the day whether we got this right … we believe we got it right,” he said.
The report also concluded that Hoboken, N.J. Mayor Dawn Zimmer’s separate allegations that Christie’s office threatened to withhold Hurricane Sandy funds unless she approved a development project in her town were “unsubstantiated” and “demonstrably false.” Christie’s office has denied those claims.
Zimmer released a statement dismissing and criticizing the report, saying the lawyers’ conclusion was “sadly predictable.” She added: “Randy Mastro could have written his report the day he was hired and saved the taxpayers the million dollars in fees he billed in generating this one-sided whiewash of serious misconduct by the Christie Administration.”
A state legislative committee, meanwhile, continues its own investigation into the so-called “Bridgegate” scandal. Timothy O’Donovan, a spokesman for Democratic Assemblyman John Wisniewski – who is co-chairing the probe – told msnbc that the report is “hard to accept at face value when it’s internal.”









