Politics & Government
'He Just Flat-Out Lied,' Christie Aide Texted During Bridgegate News Conference
A former aide to Gov. Chris Christie said the governor lied about his knowledge of the Bridgegate scandal during a press conference.

A former aide to Gov. Chris Christie said the governor lied about his knowledge of the Bridgegate scandal during a press conference on the matter, according to a court filing.
Christine Renna, who worked for Deputy Chief of Staff Bridget Anne Kelly, had texts filed in court and published in the media that said: “Are you listening? He just flat out lied about senior staff and (former deputy chief of staff Bill) Stepien not being involved."
In the texts that were reported by The Record and Politico, Renna said: “He lied. And if emails are found with the subpoena of (campaign) emails are uncovered in discovery if it come to that it could be bad.”
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Here is the whole text, courtesy of Politico:
Christie staffer texts another staffer about Christie during Bridgegate: "He just flat out lied" pic.twitter.com/tkZEz2STS0
— Matt Friedman (@MattFriedmanNJ) August 10, 2016
Renna sent text messages to Pete Sheridan, who had worked on Christie’s re-election campaign, during a Dec. 13, 2013, press conference in which Christie took questions about the political payback scheme involving George Washington Bridge lane closures, according to the court filing that was published in the media reports.
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Christie had earlier told a reporter that Stepien had assured him he had no knowledge of the lane closures. Renna deleted the text, according to the reports.
Christie offered a response to the revelation:
Christie this AM on #Bridgegate news:"I absolutely dispute it. It's ridiculous. It's nothing new. There's nothing new to talk about."per @AP
— Matt Arco (@MatthewArco) August 10, 2016
The scandal severely damaged Christie's standing in New Jersey, leading to David Wildstein, the Christie-appointed Port Authority official behind the Fort Lee Bridgegate traffic jam, pleading guilty last year to two counts of conspiracy.
Kelly and Bill Baroni, another Christie appointee at the Port Authority, were also indicted in connection with the Bridgegate scandal, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Both have denied the charges against them.
Wildstein has admitted the scheme to close lanes at the George Washington Bridge and create endless traffic jams over four successive mornings in the fall of 2013 was retribution to the Fort Lee mayor for not endorsing the governor’s re-election campaign, according to the U.S. Attorneys Office.
As a result of those admissions, Baroni and Kelly were each charged with nine counts in a scheme to misuse Port Authority resources to facilitate and conceal the cause of traffic problems in Fort Lee in September of 2013.
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