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BREAKING: Top DOJ Official EXPOSES Alvin Bragg, Admits Trump Cases Are Bogus

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An undercover conservative sting operation has caught the top spokesman for a New York Department of Justice office admitting that the various civil and criminal state cases against former President Donald Trump are politically motivated.

The “unwitting whistleblower,” as host Steven Crowder calls him, is Nicholas Biase, chief of public affairs for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York. Grainy footage of Biase speaking at a bar shows the spokesman waving a pint of beer and casually agreeing that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s hush money conviction against Trump was brought to hurt his chances in November. Biase is in charge of public affairs for arguably the most powerful federal prosecutorial office in the U.S., one that has been dramatized in hit series like HBO’s “Billions.”

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An undercover journalist with Crowder’s Mug Club can be overheard leading Biase on as she said Bragg’s felony convictions “did nothing to stop” President Trump from leading in the polls while President Joe Biden remained in the race. “No, in fact they made him more relevant,” Biase admits near the start of the clip. Asked if Bragg’s case backfired, he nods. “It sure did.”

Going on, he added, “The whole thing is disgusting, and they’re out to get him… and that’s why, like, he’s surging in the polls. You know, it’s a perversion of justice.”

The shocking slips of the tongue by Biase lay bare how even the diligently loyal public affairs team of a U.S. attorney general is not sold on their mission to prosecute President Trump. Although Bragg is a local prosecutor, he is also a Democrat, and his office’s actions are certain to contain elements of political considerations. President Trump is seeking to have his conviction overturned based on a Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity, and Bragg told a judge last week that he would not oppose Trump’s motion to delay sentencing. During the trial, defense lawyers accused Bragg of resurrecting felony fraud charges that expired under the state’s statute of limitations, a sentiment that Biase appeared to agree with in the clip.

“[Bragg] was stacking charges and rearranging things just to make it fit a case. No, to be honest with you I think the case is nonsense,” he revealed, characterizing state-level prosecution as the “Wild West” where federal oversight is less effective. “They’re like idiots, they don’t care, they’re all political, so yeah. [Bragg] is probably gonna try to lock him up.”

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Biase claims to have known Bragg for 15 years, long before he rode into office in 2021 on a mission to reform the justice system and relieve the system of prosecutions for low-level offenses. His approach, as well as a surge in migrants to New York, have resulted in a spate of high-profile violent incidents, including the mugging of several celebrities and the arrest of recent migrants who assaulted New York police officers. The opportunity to prosecute Trump, Biase suggests, was too good for Bragg to pass up.

“Did you know who he was before he tried to prosecute Trump?” he asked the journalist unknowingly. “You do now.”

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