First I met a little -known councilor from New York City called Letitia James in the Auges at a Brooklyn press conference about rapper Foxy Brown. It seems that Foxy had been arrested again on some bad behavior.
And among the people who went out to defend her were James, whose true agenda had nothing to do with hip hop or crime. It was a name for Herelf.
And she did it. For all the wrong reasons.
James, with whom I had never heard of me, went to me in the event and began to load me, but not about the problematic recording artist. I was furious for my columns that supported the Barclays center still unnecessary, which I think would revitalize a decrepit strip of Brooklyn and bring high profile entertainment and work to a place where they were needed in a developed way.
James was one of the most burning opponents of the projects, and demanded that my tone change.
I told him that my columns simply reflected my opinion deeply hero.
Besids, I said, I didn’t think he appropriated that she faces me about something not related to the rapper in question and tried to get away. But James followed me, continuing his punisure without hitting. She wouldn’t leave my face.
I thought they were notes.
Barclays, of course, was built and turned out to be a great success, doubting unemployment in local housing projects and bringing world-class-class acts, Barbra Streisand, just to name two to the center of Brooklyn.
And James, who later became pride the first woman of color chosen for office in the entire city as a public defender, suddenly dropped his opposition, angry at his companions protesters.
It seemed that sucking the powerful developers while climbing the political food chain was more important than their supposed beliefs.
Therefore, I am not obliged that the attorney general who criticized the alleged commercial fraud of Donald Trump is being accused of similar behavior.
James, the simulated fighter of the small people, apparently declared that a house he bought in Virginia in 2023, his main residence, thought as the main New York prosecutor that the law demanded to live in this state.
More strangely, he is accused of buying another property with his father as co-firming, but falsely listing the couple as “husband and wife” in 1983 and 2000.
All this, supposedly, to obtain cheaper mortgage rates. She could face criminal charges.
Whatever the result of these accusations, James will probably live to regret his infamous statement that pointed to Donald Trump: “It doesn’t matter how big, rich or powerful believe you are, nobody is above the law.”
I would like to add this: it doesn’t matter how big, rich and powerful believe you are, the hypocrites will always be exposed. Then, maybe think twice before scolding and harassing a president, real estate developers, or journalists, and looking in the mirror.