With each passing day, it becomes more and more apparent that there is an incestuous relationship between the Biden administration, the Department of Justice, and the Democratic National Committee (DNC). Now we see that a former Biden administration DOJ, currently one of the attorneys prosecuting former President Donald Trump in his New York fraud trial, accepted thousands from the DNC for “political consulting.”
Advertisement
The Democratic National Committee paid Trump prosecutor Matthew Colangelo thousands of dollars for “political consulting” in 2018, Fox News Digital has learned.
Colangelo delivered opening statements in the unprecedented criminal trial of former President Trump and currently serves as a top prosecutor with Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s Office on the case.
Colangelo joined Bragg’s office in December 2022 after the resignations of Mark Pomerantz and Carey Dunne — prosecutors who were investigating Trump and resigned in protest of Bragg’s initial unwillingness to indict the former president. Colangelo left a senior role at the Biden Justice Department to join Bragg’s team. Bragg afterward brought charges against the former president in April 2023, raising questions among some in the GOP about alleged politicization of the case.
There’s an interesting timeline here; the payments came in 2018, Colangelo began work at the Justice Department as an acting associate attorney general in 2021 , and then resigned from the DOJ and took a position in New York working for DA Alvin Bragg in December of 2022.
According to Federal Election Commission records reviewed by Fox News Digital, DNC Services Corp/Democratic National Committee paid Colangelo twice on Jan. 31, 2018. Colangelo was given two payments of $6,000, for a total of $12,000.
The “description” for the purpose of payment is labeled “Political Consulting.”
Advertisement
Granted $12,000 isn’t a huge amount in this game, but it’s still significant.
See Related: Donald Trump Faces Possible Jail Time for Gag Order Violation in Manhattan Case
This begs at least one question: What was Matthew Colangelo being paid to do, precisely? “Political consulting” could cover an awfully lot of ground. When the DNC was paying him for whatever he did, he was working as a “deputy attorney general for social justice,” which sure sounds like a patronage gig. What possible value could Colangelo have returned to the DNC that was worth $12,000 to them?
At the time, Colangelo was serving in then-New York Attorney General Eric Scheiderman’s office as the deputy attorney general for social justice, assuming the role from Bragg. Bragg, at the time, was appointed as chief deputy attorney general.
At the very least, this is a conflict of interest. At the worst? A conspiracy to take down a former president who is, as of this writing, running ahead of his befuddled opponent in the polls. It is not at all unlikely that this was a cultivated placement of a compliant official, one that was known in advance to harbor animosity towards the former president and to put him in a position to take part in one of the most politically motivated prosecutions since the Roman Senatus Consultum Ultimum was used to sanction the Gracchii.
Advertisement
The revolving door between the Biden administration, the DNC, and the courts is on full display now, and the focus of the people going through that door is on the 2024 election.
O, what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive.