Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has once again shown the nation what happens when politics and incompetence collide.
His office just dropped the case against a woman accused of sucker-punching pro-life activist Savannah Craven Antao—because prosecutors missed a filing deadline. Not because of weak evidence. Not because the charges were flimsy. But because his team couldn’t get the paperwork in on time.
The attack was caught on video. Antao was hit twice in the face while conducting a street interview, leaving her with lacerations and medical bills. Yet somehow, accountability vanished in a puff of bureaucratic smoke.
“District Attorney Bragg’s shocking refusal to uphold justice only works to undermine confidence in the system, especially when our political climate has become as fraught as it is now,” said Christopher Ferrara, senior counsel at the Thomas More Society, the legal organization representing Antao.
“Failing to prosecute these clear-cut charges sets a dangerous standard for how our society responds to violence against those engaging in democratic dialogue,” he added.
For sure. At a bare minimum.
But what’s the real the message here? That if you’re outspoken—especially if you’re conservative or pro-life—you can be assaulted in broad daylight and the system will shrug. Bragg has no problem spending resources on soft-on-crime policies, but when it comes to protecting someone exercising her First Amendment rights, suddenly deadlines matter more than justice.
He offered a half-hearted apology, blaming an “internal reassignment” for the missed deadline. But apologies don’t stop violence, and excuses don’t make victims whole. The Thomas More Society is pursuing a civil case, but it should never have come to that. This was a straightforward assault case that Bragg’s office fumbled—or perhaps quietly buried. You be the judge.
The role of a prosecutor is simple: enforce the law, not tilt the scales. Bragg’s office failed spectacularly. And every time this happens, it chips away at the principle that justice is blind.
New Yorkers—and Americans watching this fiasco—should demand better. Because if violent attacks against political activists can be dismissed on “technicalities,” then the law no longer protects us equally.
And once that’s gone, everything else starts to unravel.