Bridget Anne Kelly
| Bridget Anne Kelly | |
|---|---|
| Born: | 1972 New Jersey |
| Charges: | Wire fraud, Conspiracy (conviction vacated by SCOTUS 2020) |
| Sentence: | Originally 13 months (vacated) |
| Facility: | N/A |
| Status: | Conviction vacated (May 2020) |
Bridget Anne Kelly is an American former political operative who served as Deputy Chief of Staff to New Jersey Governor Chris Christie. In 2017, she was convicted for her role in the "Bridgegate" scandal—the politically motivated closure of access lanes to the George Washington Bridge in September 2013. But the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously vacated her conviction in May 2020, ruling that while her conduct was corrupt and an abuse of power, it didn't constitute federal fraud.
Early Career
Kelly built her career in New Jersey Republican politics through progressively responsible positions in state and local government. Before joining the Christie administration, she worked various communications and political roles that showed her competence and loyalty to Republican causes.
She joined Christie's team and quickly proved herself effective. Her rise was rapid. By 2013, she'd reached Deputy Chief of Staff to the Governor—one of the most powerful spots in the administration. She served as a key gatekeeper to Christie, managed relationships with local officials across the state, and was deeply involved in the political strategy for Christie's 2013 reelection campaign. Her position made her central to the administration's efforts to secure endorsements from Democratic mayors as part of Christie's bipartisan appeal.
The Bridgegate Scandal
Background
In 2013, Chris Christie was seeking reelection as Governor with ambitions beyond state office. He was positioning himself for a 2016 presidential run, and his team developed a strategy to secure endorsements from Democratic mayors. The goal was straightforward: demonstrate Christie could work across party lines and build coalitions, a crucial selling point for a Republican in a blue state. A landslide reelection with bipartisan support would position him as a formidable national candidate.
The administration maintained detailed spreadsheets tracking which Democratic mayors had endorsed Christie and which hadn't. Endorsements were pursued aggressively, with meetings arranged and political incentives offered. Mark Sokolich, the Democratic mayor of Fort Lee, was among those courted. Fort Lee sits at the New Jersey end of the George Washington Bridge, one of the world's busiest bridges connecting New Jersey to New York City and a critical transportation artery. Despite the administration's outreach, Sokolich declined to endorse Christie for reelection. That decision would have devastating consequences for his town.
The Lane Closures
On August 13, 2013, Kelly sent a now-infamous email to David Wildstein, a Christie ally at the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey: "Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee."
On September 9, 2013, the first day of school, the Port Authority closed two of the three local access lanes from Fort Lee to the George Washington Bridge. No notice went to Fort Lee officials or the public.
Massive traffic gridlock resulted. It lasted four days. The backup:
- Delayed emergency responders
- Trapped school buses with children
- Caused hours-long commutes for residents
- Created significant public safety hazards
Port Authority officials initially claimed the closures were for a "traffic study." That explanation was later exposed as false.
The Cover-Up
When questions arose, Christie administration officials and Port Authority allies maintained the fiction that closures were a legitimate traffic study examining local versus express lane usage. Port Authority officials fed this explanation to Fort Lee officials and the media, even as chaos continued.
Internal communications later revealed the truth. No actual traffic study existed. No data was collected, no methodology established, no analysis performed. The "traffic study" was fabricated to provide bureaucratic cover for political retaliation against Mayor Sokolich for refusing to endorse Christie. As media scrutiny intensified in late 2013, Kelly and other officials coordinated responses designed to distance the governor and maintain plausible deniability. The cover-up worked for months until documentary evidence proved the scheme's political motivation.
Scandal Erupts
In January 2014, Kelly's email became public. The exposure was immediate and devastating. National news dominated coverage, and Christie's reputation suffered severely just as he was being considered a leading candidate for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination.
Criminal Prosecution
Federal Charges
In May 2015, a federal grand jury indicted Kelly and Bill Baroni, a former Port Authority deputy executive director, on charges of:
- Conspiracy to commit wire fraud
- Wire fraud
- Conspiracy to deprive Fort Lee residents of their civil rights
- Misapplication of property of an organization receiving federal benefits
David Wildstein, who'd carried out the lane closures, pleaded guilty and cooperated with prosecutors.
Trial and Conviction
Kelly and Baroni were tried together in federal court in Newark in fall 2016. Both were convicted on all counts on November 4, 2016.
Prosecutors argued that Kelly and Baroni had used their positions to misappropriate Port Authority property (the bridge lanes) and defraud the public of their right to honest services from government officials.
Sentencing
In March 2017, U.S. District Judge Susan Wigenton sentenced Kelly to 13 months in federal prison, followed by supervised release. Baroni received 18 months.
Kelly tearfully testified at sentencing, expressing remorse while also suggesting she was being made a scapegoat for more powerful figures who escaped accountability.
Appeals
Third Circuit Appeal
Kelly and Baroni appealed their convictions to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. They argued that the federal fraud statutes didn't apply because they hadn't sought to obtain money or property for themselves. The prosecution, they contended, was an improper federalization of local political misconduct that, while potentially unethical, wasn't federal crime.
In November 2018, the Third Circuit upheld the convictions in a divided decision. The majority ruled that the defendants had committed fraud by deceiving the Port Authority and the public about the lane closures' true purpose. The court found that the defendants had commandeered Port Authority resources—including the bridge lanes, personnel time, and operational capacity—for political purposes, which constituted a taking of property under federal fraud law. A dissenting judge argued the majority's interpretation was overly broad and could criminalize routine political conduct. The decision set up the eventual Supreme Court showdown.
Supreme Court
Kelly and Baroni petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court, which agreed to hear the case. Styled Kelly v. United States, it was argued in January 2020.
Supreme Court Decision
On May 7, 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously vacated the convictions of both Kelly and Baroni. Justice Elena Kagan wrote the decision.
The Ruling
The Court found that while Kelly's conduct was "an abuse of power" and "corrupt," it didn't meet legal requirements for federal fraud:
Key Legal Points
Several points centered the Court's reasoning:
- The federal fraud statutes require defendants to have sought "money or property"
- Regulatory decisions about how to allocate government resources like bridge lanes don't constitute "property" under fraud law
- The lane closure was an exercise of regulatory power, however corrupt, not a theft of property
- The government failed to identify any money or property that was the scheme's object
Impact
The decision significantly limited federal prosecutors' ability to use fraud statutes against state and local officials whose corruption doesn't involve actual theft or personal financial gain.
Aftermath
No Prison Time
Because the Supreme Court vacated her conviction before she began serving her sentence, Kelly never went to federal prison. Her conviction was dismissed with prejudice, meaning she cannot be recharged for the same conduct.
Public Response
The Supreme Court's decision provoked strong reactions across the political spectrum and among legal commentators. Many noted the profound irony that conduct everyone agreed was corrupt, abusive, and potentially dangerous—traffic gridlock that delayed emergency responders and endangered public safety—went unpunished because of narrow technical requirements in fraud law.
Legal scholars debated whether the decision represented proper judicial restraint or exposed a troubling gap in federal criminal law. Supporters of the ruling argued that the Court correctly prevented prosecutorial overreach and the federalization of every local political misconduct instance. Critics contended that the decision created a roadmap for corrupt officials to abuse their positions as long as they don't personally profit financially. Fort Lee residents and Mayor Sokolich expressed frustration that the scheme's perpetrators faced no criminal accountability despite harming their community. The decision also reignited debates about whether federal fraud statutes should be reformed to more explicitly cover public corruption cases.
Chris Christie
Governor Christie was never charged in connection with Bridgegate, despite being the ultimate beneficiary of the scheme and the center of the endorsement strategy that motivated it. Federal prosecutors apparently concluded they lacked sufficient evidence to prove Christie's direct involvement in ordering or approving the closures, even as multiple aides and allies faced criminal charges.
The scandal effectively ended Christie's 2016 presidential aspirations. What had been positioned as a strength—his tough, no-nonsense leadership style—became reframed as bullying and vindictiveness. His poll numbers plummeted, and while he entered the 2016 Republican primary, he never recovered. He withdrew after a poor showing in New Hampshire and eventually endorsed Donald Trump. Christie has consistently denied knowledge of the scheme, claiming subordinates acted without his authorization. David Wildstein testified at trial that Christie was informed about the closures while they were occurring and appeared pleased. Christie fired Kelly and other implicated staff in January 2014 after the scandal broke, positioning himself as a victim of staff misconduct rather than a participant.
David Wildstein
David Wildstein, the Christie ally at the Port Authority who received Kelly's email and directly implemented the closures, became the government's star witness. After initially invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination before a state legislative committee investigating Bridgegate, he eventually pleaded guilty to federal conspiracy charges in May 2015 and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors.
His testimony at trial was devastating to Kelly and Baroni. He provided detailed accounts of the planning, execution, and cover-up, including testimony that Governor Christie was made aware of the closures while they occurred. In exchange for cooperation, Wildstein received probation rather than prison time when sentenced in July 2017. The Supreme Court's ruling effectively meant that Wildstein's cooperation—which required him to testify against his former colleagues and expose the Christie administration's inner workings—was in service of a prosecution ultimately deemed legally insufficient. Wildstein's guilty plea, however, wasn't vacated, as he hadn't appealed his conviction.
Legacy
The Bridgegate case had significant implications across multiple domains:
Political Impact
- Destroyed Christie's presidential aspirations
- Became shorthand for petty political retaliation
- Raised questions about accountability in the Christie administration
Legal Impact
- Limited the scope of federal fraud statutes
- Made it harder to prosecute state and local corruption that doesn't involve monetary theft
- Raised questions about gaps in federal criminal law
Kelly's Situation
While legally vindicated by the Supreme Court, Kelly's career in politics and public service was effectively destroyed. She became the most visible face of the scandal, with her "time for some traffic problems" email becoming one of the most famous pieces of incriminating evidence in modern American political history. The email was endlessly quoted, mocked, and dissected as a symbol of petty vindictiveness.
Kelly maintained throughout that she was made a scapegoat for a broader culture of political retribution in the Christie administration, and that more powerful figures who directed or benefited from the scheme escaped accountability. Even after the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that her conduct, however wrong and corrupt, wasn't criminal fraud, the damage to her reputation and career prospects was irreversible. She became synonymous with a scandal that brought down a presidential hopeful. The legal victory couldn't restore what she lost professionally and personally during years of investigation, prosecution, and appeals. The case left Kelly in a unique position: legally exonerated at the highest level, yet permanently marked by conduct the Supreme Court explicitly described as an abuse of power.
See Also
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What was Bridgegate?
Bridgegate was a 2013 scandal in which aides to New Jersey Governor Chris Christie ordered politically motivated lane closures on the George Washington Bridge, causing massive traffic gridlock in Fort Lee as retaliation against the town's mayor for not endorsing Christie.
Q: Did Bridget Anne Kelly go to prison?
No. Although Kelly was initially sentenced to 13 months in prison, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously vacated her conviction in May 2020 before she began serving her sentence.
Q: Why did the Supreme Court overturn the Bridgegate convictions?
The Supreme Court ruled that while Kelly's conduct was corrupt and an abuse of power, it didn't constitute federal fraud because the scheme didn't seek to obtain money or property. The bridge lanes were a regulatory resource, not property under fraud law.
Q: What was the famous Bridgegate email?
Kelly sent an email to a Port Authority official saying "Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee," which ordered the politically motivated lane closures that caused the scandal.
Q: Was Chris Christie charged in Bridgegate?
No, Governor Christie was never charged. He denied knowledge of the scheme, though testimony suggested he was informed about the closures while they were happening.
References