How the Indictment of Gavin Newsom’s Chief of Staff Could Implicate the Governor in a Scheme To Shield a Top Donor From Legal Scrutiny

WFB:
In April 2022, Newsom administration attorney Melanie Proctor came forward with an explosive allegation: Gov. Gavin Newsom’s (D., Calif.) office was meddling in a high-profile sexual discrimination lawsuit his own administration had brought against the video game developer Activision. Proctor, who worked the case, said Newsom’s office had demanded advance notice of California’s litigation strategy and abruptly fired the administration’s lead prosecutor, actions Proctor claimed were “mimicking the interests of Activision’s counsel.”

Newsom’s office said at the time that Proctor’s allegations were “categorically false.” But buried deep in the criminal indictment last week of Newsom’s former chief of staff, Dana Williamson, prosecutors presented evidence spelling out how she helped sabotage California’s litigation against “Corporation 1,” which several news outlets have identified as Activision, a company Newsom shared deep ties with.

“Vindicated,” Proctor posted on her LinkedIn page after Williamson’s indictment. MORE

3 Comments on How the Indictment of Gavin Newsom’s Chief of Staff Could Implicate the Governor in a Scheme To Shield a Top Donor From Legal Scrutiny

  1. Does it really matter if the crime is proven? Some fucking pieces of shit democrat judge will toss the verdict for any conjured up reason she can pull out of her communist ass.

    democrat judicial tyranny is the bulwark of all democrat tyranny.

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