The two prosecutors leading the Manhattan district attorney’s criminal case against former President
The resignations are a major twist in the probe, which last year led to criminal tax charges being filed against the Trump Organization and Chief Financial Officer
The New York Times was first to report the prosecutors’ resignations. The district attorney’s office didn’t return a call for comment, nor did Dunne or Pomerantz.
Bruce Green, a law professor and chair of the Louis Stein Center for Law and Ethics at Fordham Law School, said the resignations are a sign that Bragg has decided not to move ahead with any charges against the Trumps -- the biggest question hanging over the case -- and that the prosecutors disagree.
“If they were going to do a prosecution of these folks they would be sticking around to help,” Green said. “The fact that they quit in a public way suggests they wanted the case to go forward and the DA decided not to seek an indictment against Trump or his family.”
The district attorney hasn’t moved to dismiss the charges and no decision has been made publicly regarding further indictments.
Unreported Perks
Vance had accused Weisselberg and the
The criminal case is being conducted in cooperation with New York Attorney General
The Trump Organization has long argued the investigations are politically motivated. In May, Trump issued a statement accusing James and Vance of being “possessed, at an unprecedented level, with destroying the political fortunes of President Donald J. Trump.”
Dunne became Vance’s general counsel shortly after Trump’s 2016 election, following a stint as a senior partner at
Weisselberg, whose motion to dismiss was filed last month and unsealed Tuesday, argued the case against him must be thrown out because the charges are blocked by an immunity deal he reached in a related federal case against Trump’s former lawyer
(Updates with detail about the two prosecutors who resigned.)
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Anthony Lin, Steve Stroth
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