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Lane Closures Were ‘Idiotic,’ Christie Spokesman Testifies

Lane Closures Were ‘Idiotic,’ Christie Spokesman Testifies

By Shawn Boburg and Melissa Hayes, The Record (Hackensack, N.J.)

TRENTON, N.J. — The Christie administration was slow to acknowledge the true motive behind the lane closures at the George Washington Bridge because of a betrayal by a Port Authority executive who repeatedly claimed that a legitimate traffic study was the reason Fort Lee was gridlocked for five days last September, according to testimony given by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s spokesman on Tuesday.

Michael Drewniak, who testified for seven hours on Tuesday before a legislative committee probing the closures, also said that he informed a senior official in Christie’s office in late October of allegations that a deputy chief of staff in the governor’s office and Christie’s campaign manager had prior knowledge of the lane closures. Drewniak brought those allegations — made by the same Port Authority executive, David Wildstein — to the governor again in early December after a one-on-one dinner meeting during which Wildstein also claimed that he had told the governor about the lane closures as they were happening in September.

About a week later, on Dec. 13, Christie said publicly that his senior staff had assured him that they had no knowledge of the lane closures.

Drewniak’s account, described in detail, provided fodder for a grueling full-day hearing in Trenton during which Democrats pushed him on how the administration missed several warning signs. Drewniak, in turn, portrayed the lane closures as an “idiotic” and misguided idea that was convincingly justified for months by Wildstein, his onetime friend, and former Port Authority Deputy Executive Director Bill Baroni.

Drewniak, who is known for his combative style, was exceedingly polite on Tuesday, addressing committee members as “sir” and “ma’am.” And although Drewniak’s testimony was colorful, it echoed statements already provided in a report on the lane closures commissioned by Christie that concluded the governor had no involvement. That report said there was an ulterior motive behind the lane closures, but did not identify what that motive was. The governor has said that the closures appeared to be politically motivated.

Republicans claimed that very little significant new information was provided during Drewniak’s testimony.

Drewniak is the second member of Christie’s administration to testify under oath before the legislative panel as a concurrent investigation is being conducted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Newark. Drewniak has acknowledged appearing before a grand jury.

On Tuesday, Drewniak defended the office’s initial response to the lane closure controversy, described his growing concern after the Dec. 5 dinner meeting with Wildstein, and expressed confidence that the remaining members of Christie’s office had no involvement.

“I can say with complete confidence and comfort that none of these people — starting with Governor Christie — had any involvement whatsoever in this reckless and perplexing episode,” Drewniak said. He called the lane closure scandal “one of the strangest things I’ve ever witnessed,” adding that the motive is still a mystery to him and asserting that he played no “knowing role in any actual or perceived ‘coverup.’ ”

Wildstein, he said, acknowledged during the dinner at a steakhouse that the traffic study was his idea and insisted that it was legitimate. But Drewniak said his concern grew because Wildstein also appeared to be “offering up people” during the dinner meeting, mentioning that he had gotten approval from two Christie confidants and that he had mentioned the study to the governor.

Democratic lawmakers zeroed in on the administration’s missed opportunities to look into the bridge allegations, building off Drewniak’s testimony that he had conversations with top staff members in late October and raised concerns again after the Dec. 5 dinner meeting.

Drewniak said sometime between mid-October and mid-November, when he left on vacation, Wildstein told him that Christie’s former campaign manager, Bill Stepien, and his deputy chief of staff, Bridget Anne Kelly, had knowledge of the lanes being closed as part of a purported traffic study.

Drewniak said he took that information to his boss, Maria Comella, a deputy chief of staff, who dismissed the matter as a Port Authority issue that was being hyped up for political reasons during the governor’s re-election campaign. He also raised the issue with Charles McKenna, Christie’s chief counsel, who told him he would look into it.

Drewniak raised the issue again in early December, the morning after his dinner with Wildstein. This time, Drewniak addressed it with Kevin O’Dowd, the governor’s chief of staff, and Christie himself. Wildstein claimed at that dinner that in addition to Kelly and Stepien’s having knowledge of the lane closures, he had told Christie about it during a 9/11 memorial event. Drewniak said Wildstein maintained that the lane closures were part of a traffic study, which was his idea.

Drewniak said Christie was “incredulous” and questioned how he would be expected to know what Wildstein was talking about if he mentioned a traffic study in passing at an event. But he also said Christie had concerns about Stepien.

“He said one thing to me,” Drewniak said. “He said, ‘I always wondered if Stepien knew more about this.’ ”

State Sen. Loretta Weinberg, a Teaneck Democrat and co-chairwomen of the legislative panel, said the administration went into “damage control mode” instead of working hard to find out what had happened.

“Why didn’t somebody — the commissioner in the Port Authority, a chief counsel to the governor, the governor’s press secretary, the governor’s chief of staff — why didn’t one of them actually find out and ask the questions, what happened here?” she said.

Drewniak described Wildstein as “someone I trusted, someone I considered a friend and someone who I knew worked very hard and long hours.”

Drewniak spoke about the “personal betrayal” he felt when he learned of Wildstein’s role in the lane closures.

“I now know how badly, regrettably, even naively, I misplaced that trust,” he said.

Until The Record published Kelly’s email, “Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee,” on Jan. 8, Drewniak assumed no one in the governor’s office was involved in the lane closures because “there is no value in something this asinine.”

Drewniak had been informed of a statement the Port Authority issued during the week of the lane closings, saying they were part of a traffic study — a claim that has since been discredited. He also was sent copies of emails about media inquiries to the Port Authority, and in other emails he used expletives to describe reporters who were looking into the lane closures, according to documents released by the legislative committee.

Drewniak’s appearance before the committee comes a week after Christina Renna, a former supervisor in the governor’s Office of Intergovernmental Affairs, responded to questions about her staff’s involvement in securing Democratic endorsements for Christie’s campaign. Renna worked for Kelly.

Christie and some Republican members of the committee said the hearing was not as productive as it was costly. A special counsel advising the committee is charging $350 an hour.

“We spent seven hours and another, I would say conservatively speaking, $15,000 to $16,000 to be told what we already knew, which is that David Wildstein was responsible for what happened and that it was his idea, which apparently he took pains to trumpet to people who he viewed as important,” said Assemblywoman Amy Handlin, R-Monmouth. “We certainly learned nothing that is going to help us reform the Port Authority, absolutely nothing.”

Christie, speaking during his monthly radio show on NJ 101.5, said he spent little time on Tuesday listening to Drewniak’s testimony, but is confident nothing new emerged.

“Absolutely nothing new has come out of this,” he said.

Photo: Peter Stevens via Flickr

Christie Aide Details Workings Of Office At Heart Of Bridge Scandal

Christie Aide Details Workings Of Office At Heart Of Bridge Scandal

By Melissa Hayes and John Reitmeyer, The Record (Hackensack, N.J.)

TRENTON, N.J. — An aide to New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie detailed the inner workings of the political outreach office at the heart of the George Washington Bridge scandal, telling lawmakers at a hearing Tuesday about a supervisor who seemed to take orders rather than make decisions, and taking responsibility for the order to cut communications with Fort Lee’s mayor.

Christina Renna was the first of Christie’s staff to testify directly before the legislative committee investigating the bridge scandal.

Her supervisor and onetime friend, Bridget Anne Kelly, is the now-fired Christie deputy chief of staff who appeared to order the lane closings at the bridge with her “Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee” email.

Renna, who worked in Christie’s Office of Intergovernmental Affairs and was Kelly’s former deputy, cast doubt on a core conclusion drawn by the lawyers hired by Christie to investigate the lane closures: that Kelly and David Wildstein, a former Port Authority official, alone ordered the lanes closed, apparently to punish Fort Lee Mayor Mark Sokolich, who would not endorse Christie’s bid for a second term.

During a daylong committee meeting Tuesday, lawmakers pressed Renna to explain how the Christie administration staffers in her office straddled the line between politics and good government; whether Kelly was the type of manager capable of carrying out the lane closures; and what, if any, knowledge Renna had of the episode.

In her responses, Renna said she played no role in the lane closures, but she acknowledged she ordered a staffer to stop communications with Sokolich. Renna did that, she said, after learning Kelly was not happy with the mayor.

Renna said there were some inaccuracies in the documents made public by the lawyers after they released their report — a report Christie has repeatedly held up as the scandal has developed into the biggest crisis of his political career, one that has threatened his presidential aspirations.

She resisted adopting the lawyers’ use of the phrase “lane realignment,” instead repeatedly saying “lane closures” during testimony that was at times emotional, but also at times lighthearted and easygoing.

Renna, seated next to her attorney throughout Tuesday’s hearing, was asked to explain why it was appropriate for staffers who worked under her in a government agency to seek political endorsements for Christie from mayors at the same time they were interacting with them for government purposes. She responded they did so only as volunteers on their own time.

She also was asked why she didn’t challenge orders from Kelly, even a request to delete an email demonstrating Kelly was apparently happy to hear the lane closures created problems in Fort Lee. Renna said she feared she could lose her job in the Christie administration.

The Democrats who control the panel said the testimony echoed what other witnesses have said, namely that they felt too intimidated to come forward and challenge the lane closures, which snarled traffic in Fort Lee for several days and tied up ambulances and other first responders.

Renna was the first witness to come before the committee in months, following a period of dormancy after two other potential witnesses, Kelly and former Christie campaign manager Bill Stepien, refused to turn over documents, citing their constitutional protection against self-incrimination. A Superior Court judge ultimately upheld their right to snub the panel.

It was during this period that the firm Christie hired to review the lane closures, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, released its report and notes from the interviews it conducted with 75 witnesses, including Christie himself. After the hearing ended Tuesday afternoon, the state released some bills the firm has submitted, totaling more than $1 million.

The legislative committee plans to meet again next week to take testimony from Christie press secretary Michael Drewniak, who reportedly also has cooperated with a federal criminal investigation of the lane closures.

At one point during Tuesday’s hearing, when asked directly if she thought Kelly orchestrated the lane closures, Renna stopped short of saying so, adding Kelly made few decisions on her own.

“I think that Bridget was not an architect, but I think she participated in whatever this was,” Renna said.

She agreed with a characterization offered by Assemblywoman Lou Greenwald, D-Camden, who said that in his experience Kelly was “a soldier who took orders and responded to those orders and would relay orders.”

And when asked directly by Assemblyman Paul Moriarty, D-Gloucester, if she believed Kelly and Wildstein acted alone, she responded: “I don’t know.”

Greenwald also focused on how staff in her office worked to secure endorsements for Christie’s campaign from the same public officials they assisted on a daily basis. He pointed to her decision to cut off communications with the Fort Lee mayor as proof that “politics took over.”

But Renna said that staff worked to secure endorsements only after government business hours, adding there were times “panicked” staff members would call her during business hours to say a mayor brought up politics.

Democrats also focused on Renna’s remark that the attorneys hired by Christie had been inaccurate in parts of the written summary of their interview with her.

Renna never said her office’s staff was given “mandatory directives” not to communicate with certain mayors, something the Gibson Dunn lawyers attributed to her, she said Tuesday. She said staff was told they didn’t have to be proactive about returning certain mayors’ phone calls, but that if a local official called with an issue, it would be addressed.

“ ‘Hands-off mayors’ would be people IGA would not be proactively conducting outreach with,” Renna said, referring to the Office of Intergovernmental Affairs. “We would not be picking up the phone and saying, ‘Mayor, how are you doing?’ ”

Renna told the lawmakers she would have to go through the interview memo line by line to determine if there were more inaccuracies, but later, when questioned by Sen. Kevin O’Toole, R-Cedar Grove, she was more dismissive of concerns about the memo.

“Largely, I think it’s accurate,” she said.

After the hearing, the Democrats said Renna provided important information that moved the investigation forward, even if she couldn’t provide definitive answers to the still-unanswered questions of exactly who ordered the lanes closed and why.

Before Renna began testifying, Republican members aired concerns that the committee wasn’t pressing more firmly to bring in Port Authority officials for testimony, saying that would go to the ultimate goal of reforming the bi-state transportation agency.

Later in the day, Christie and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced the creation of a panel of Port Authority commissioners and advisers to both governors, to come up with ways to reform the agency.

Michael Critchley, the lawyer representing Kelly, took issue with parts of Renna’s testimony, including depictions of his client as “insecure” and “paranoid.”

“Anyone who thinks they are going to rewrite history and make Ms. Kelly a scapegoat is gravely mistaken,” he said.

AFP Photo/Jeff Zelevansky