Politics & Government
Bridget Anne Kelly, Bergen County Native, Indicted On 'Bridgegate' Conspiracy Charges
Mother of four has been out of work since Governor Christie fired her for orchestrating GWB lane closures as political payback.

Bridget Anne Kelly, a Ramsey native, and Governor Christie’s former deputy chief of staff, was indicted Friday on nine counts of wire fraud, conspiracy, and depriving people of their civil rights in federal court in connection with the “Bridgegate” scandal, the U.S. Attorney’s Office announced.
Michael Critchley, Kelly’s lawyer, said that the mother of four’s life has been “affected dramatically” by the scandal. She has been unemployed since Christie fired her in January 2014.
Officials allege that Kelley, William E. Baroni Jr., former executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, and David Wildstein, former director of interstate capital projects at the Port Authority, conspired to cause the local access lanes for the George Washington Bridge to be closed from the mornings of Sept. 9 to 13 to “maximize the congestion” as political payback.
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Fort Lee Mayor Mark Sokolich refused to endorse Governor Christie’s bid for re-election.
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Wildstein, who admitted the scheme was political payback, pleaded guilty Friday to two counts of conspiracy.
Officials allege that Kelly’s e-mail and text message communications with Port Authority officials prove she had a major hand in the unnecessary road closures that caused major gridlock under the guise of a traffic study.
Ultimately, as many as eight people could be indicted in the notorious Fort Lee traffic jam, according to any number of news sources, from NBC News to The New York Times.
- First Christie Associate To Plead Guilty In ‘Bridgegate’ Scandal; Could Cooperate With Investigators
- Prosecution Reportedly Closing In On Christie Administration As Governor’s Popularity Fades
- Christie Administration Corruption Probe Has ‘New Details,’ Could Produce More Charges
- Most Say Christie Should Leave Office If Committed Crime
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