An official under Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg responded to a letter from a House Republican panel, signaling the district attorney is open to testifying in the wake of former President Donald Trump’s felony conviction late last month.
In a letter to House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio.), Bragg general counsel Leslie Dubeck said the district attorney currently has “scheduling conflicts” but might testify in front of the committee in the future under certain conditions.
“This Office is committed to voluntary cooperation,” Ms. Dubeck wrote in a letter, dated June 7. “That cooperation includes making the District Attorney available to provide testimony on behalf of the Office at an agreed-upon date, and evaluating the propriety of allowing an Assistant District Attorney to testify publicly about an active prosecution to which he is assigned.”…
