DOJ Chief of Public Affairs caught on undercover video admitting Trump indictments are politically motivated

A new undercover video from Louder with Crowder’s MugClub Undercover unit has surfaced, showing Nicholas Biase, Chief of Public Affairs for the Department of Justice, describing the multiple cases against 2024 GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump as a “travesty of justice.” He suggested that this was one of the reasons Trump is gaining in the polls.

Discussing the case led by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, which resulted in Trump being convicted of 24 counts of felony falsifying business records, Biase stated that Bragg “was stacking charges and, like, rearranging things just to make it fit a case.” He added, “Honestly, I think the case [against Trump in NYC] is nonsense.”

Biase, who holds the position of Chief of Public Affairs at the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, remarked, “Every real estate person in New York does what [Trump] did. Nobody’s ever been charged with this. It’s all him [Trump]. And that’s why, like, [Trump’s] surging in the polls. You know, it’s a perversion of justice.” He mentioned that he has known Bragg for 15 years and that Bragg once worked in his office. Biase also called Bragg’s key witness in the case, Michael Cohen, a “psycho.”

Biase suggested that the charges against Trump had inadvertently made him “more relevant.” When asked if the charges had backfired, he agreed, saying, “It sure did.” He further stated that the goal of prosecuting Trump was to “make him a convict” and a “convicted felon.”

He also referenced a 90-day rule at the federal level, where “You can’t make any decisions on cases that are going to affect an election,” but noted that this rule does not apply at the state level, which he described as “the f*cking wild west.”

He criticized Democrats for being “so obsessed” with pursuing Trump.

Regarding the Georgia election case led by Fulton County DA Fani Willis, Biase described it as “a travesty of justice, to put it mildly,” and called it “a mockery of justice.” He went on to label Willis “a joke” and mentioned rumors involving her personal life, adding, “They’re just out to get [Trump].”

Nicholas Biase issued a statement saying, “I was recently made aware of a video where I regretfully made some statements in a private and social setting that don’t reflect my views about two local and state prosecutions. I said these things in an effort to please and impress someone I just met, who was secretly filming me.”

He continued, “I’m deeply sorry to the local and state law enforcement officials working on these matters, who deserve more respect than I showed them. I should have known better.”

By Reece Walker

Reece Walker covers news and politics with a focus on exposing public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, bureaucrats, Big Tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies.

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