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Manhattan DA Bragg, who secured Trump conviction, to testify before GOP-led House Judiciary Committee

Bragg and prosecutor Matthew Colangelo will testify before the committee, led by Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, on July 12.
Alvin Bragg speaks during a press conference.
Alvin Bragg will face House Republicans on July 12.Angela Weiss / AFP - Getty Images file

WASHINGTON — New York County District Attorney Alvin Bragg, who brought the hush money case against former President Donald Trump, will testify before the GOP-led House Judiciary Committee in July, along with prosecutor Matthew Colangelo, a source familiar with the plans confirmed Tuesday.

“The Manhattan D.A.’s Office is proud to play a crucial role in upholding and enforcing the rule of law for the people of New York," a Bragg spokesman said in a statement Tuesday, confirming Bragg’s planned testimony. "It undermines the rule of law to spread dangerous misinformation, baseless claims, and conspiracy theories following the jury’s return of a full-count felony conviction in People v. Trump.

"Nonetheless, we respect our government institutions and plan to appear voluntarily before the subcommittee after sentencing," the spokesman said.

The July 12 public hearing on Capitol Hill is one day after Trump’s sentencing hearing in New York after a Manhattan jury found him guilty of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records. The Judiciary Committee also announced that it will hold a separate hearing Thursday to "examine Alvin Bragg’s political prosecution of President Trump."

Trump and his GOP allies on Capitol Hill, including Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, are waging war on the justice system. They’ve claimed that Bragg and local Georgia prosecutor Fani Willis, as well as special counsel Jack Smith and other federal prosecutors, are politically targeting Trump ahead of the presidential election.

Jordan, a conservative firebrand and close Trump ally, announced the hearing with Bragg on Tuesday morning, just as President Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden was found guilty of three federal charges tied to possession of a gun while using narcotics.

Jordan and other Republicans have suggested that the Justice Department colluded with Bragg, pointing the finger directly at Colangelo, who joined Bragg’s prosecution team after having worked at that Justice Department and the New York attorney general’s office, where he investigated the Trump Foundation. 

A Justice Department official pushed back Tuesday in a letter to Jordan against “conspiratorial speculation” about nonexistent collusion between the Justice Department and Bragg.

Assistant Attorney General Carlos Felipe Uriarte of the Justice Department’s Office of Legislative Affairs wrote in a letter, obtained by NBC News, that the agency had conducted a “comprehensive” search for email communications between Jan. 20, 2021, and the day of Trump’s conviction and found no emails about the Trump prosecution, saying it was “unsurprising” given that the Manhattan DA and the Justice Department are separate entities.

“The Department does not generally make extensive efforts to rebut conspiratorial speculation, including to avoid the risk of lending it credibility. However, consistent with the Attorney General’s commitment to transparency, the Department has taken extraordinary steps to confirm what was already clear: there is no basis for these false claims,” the letter says.

Uriarte's letter, first reported by ABC News, said the Justice Department’s “extraordinary” efforts to respond to Jordan’s “speculation” should put the issue to rest.

“The self-justifying ‘perception’ asserted by the Committee is completely baseless, but the Committee continues to traffic it widely. As the Attorney General stated at his hearing, the conspiracy theory that the recent jury verdict in New York state court was somehow controlled by the Department is not only false, it is irresponsible,” he wrote.

“Indeed, accusations of wrongdoing made without—and in fact contrary to—evidence undermine confidence in the justice system and have contributed to increased threats of violence and attacks on career law enforcement officials and prosecutors," the letter said.

On May 31, Jordan formally requested that Bragg and Colangelo — a former Justice Department official who is a member of the Trump trial team — testify before the Judiciary subcommittee on the weaponization of the government, which Jordan also leads.

Specifically, Jordan said his hearing would explore politically motivated state and local prosecutions, including Bragg’s case against Trump.

On Friday, Bragg’s general counsel, Leslie Dubeck, responded that he would be willing to testify but needed a new hearing date to allow for the fair administration of justice in the Trump case, which will continue through the July 11 sentencing. 

She also requested an opportunity to speak with Jordan’s staff about the “scope and purpose of the proposed hearing” so Bragg can “accommodate the Committee’s invitation while also protecting the integrity of an ongoing criminal prosecution and New York’s sovereign interests.”