Katz certifi ed winner in Queens DA primary 
 BY MARK HALLUM 
 More than a month after  
 the  polls  closed,  the  Board  
 of  Elections  finally  declared  
 a  winner  on  Monday  in  the  
 roller-coaster,  nail-biter  
 Democratic  primary  for  
 Queens district attorney. 
 Borough President Melinda  
 Katz was certified as the  
 victor in the June 25 primary  
 over  her  closest  rival,  public  
 defender Tiffany Cabán,  
 who  had  initially  declared  
 victory immediately after the  
 primary. Cabán’s team is now  
 heading to court seeking to  
 have counted more than 100  
 ballots which the Board of  
 Elections had disqualified for  
 various discrepancies. 
 Winning in court seems to  
 be the only path of victory left  
 for the Cabán campaign — a  
 stunning  reversal  of  fortune  
 from the night of June 25, when  
 she celebrated an apparent  
 win, having emerged from the  
 primary with an 1,100 vote  
 lead. Katz, however, refused  
 to  concede,  insisting  that  the  
 Board of Elections count the  
 thousands of absentee and  
 approved affidavit ballots cast  
 in the rates. 
 After that count took place  
 on  July  3,  to  the  surprise  of  
 Tiffany Cabán (left) and Melinda Katz.   Photo by Mark Hallum/QNS  
 many, Katz wound up with a  
 razor-thin  20  vote  lead  over  
 Cabán.  That  triggered  an  
 automatic recount begun the  
 following week and ended  
 on July 25, with the Board  
 of  Elections  re-examining  
 all  91,000  votes  cast  in  the  
 race. As  it  turned  out, Katz’s  
 lead grew to a final margin  
 of  60  after  all  the  votes  had  
 been recounted. 
 But  the  Cabán  campaign  
 has  remained  optimistic  in  
 the court siding in their favor,  
 claiming the BOE’s decision  
 gives them the opportunity  
 to pursue the vindication  
 of over 100 affidavit and  
 objected ballots in court on  
 July 31. 
 Michael Ryan, the executive  
 director of the BOE, defended  
 the  determinations  of  the  
 board, claiming they will also  
 be  in  court  with  the  Cabán  
 campaign  only  to  clarify  
 matters,  not  to  making  any  
 arguments for their process. 
 “Essentially this litigation  
 is  really  in  some  respects  a  
 one-sided  affair,  in  that  the  
 party  that  has  a  claim  will  
 make it. And the court will  
 make  a  determination  based  
 on the law. We will simply be  
 there represented by the law  
 department to say what we did,  
 not to advocate a position,”  
 Ryan said. “So it’s ot really  
 an  adversarial  circumstance  
 the way normal litigation  
 will be.” 
 At a meeting at the  
 Manhattan  office,  the  board  
 thanked  the  work  of  BOE  
 staff  from  the  Queens  office  
 who  spent  ten  days  counting  
 91,000 ballots in the a facility  
 in Middle Village before  
 sending the their certification  
 to Albany. 
 The Cabán campaign has  
 been  attempting  to  have  up  
 to 114 affidavit ballots they  
 believe were erroneously  
 disqualified  because  
 of what attorney Jerry  
 Goldfeder has referred to as  
 “hyper-technicalities.” 
 But the court hearing has  
 been  postponed  from  earlier  
 dates awaiting a certified  
 result from the BOE. 
 Read more at QNS.com. 
 Reach reporter Mark  
 Hallum by email at mhallum@ 
 schnepsmedia.com  or  by  
 phone at (718) 260–4564. 
 ‘A comeback story’: Katz celebrates primary win 
 BY MARK HALLUM 
 Borough President Melinda  
 Katz  gained  the  Democratic  
 nomination for the Queens  
 District  Attorney  on  Monday  
 after the Board of Elections  
 certified recount results that  
 placed her 60 votes ahead of  
 Tiffany Cabán. 
 Katz threw an “appreciation  
 party” for her supporters  
 at a Banter, a Forest Hills  
 watering hole where her and  
 Congressman Gregory Meeks  
 celebrated  gaining  a  followthrough  
 on  their  primary  
 night promise to “count every  
 valid vote.” 
 “Let’s run back the tape. I  
 remember being here not long  
 ago  saying  it  wasn’t  over  yet  
 until every vote is counted,”  
 said Meeks, the new chairman  
 of  Queens  Democratic  Party.  
 “When you look at those  
 results, you see a candidate that  
 had the power to bring Queens  
 together. We talked about our  
 diversity, you look at the whole  
 breadth of Queens County, you  
 will see that Melinda Katz has  
 won thoroughly … to make  
 sure  have  the  kind  of DA  the  
 represents the great diversity  
 of Queens County.” 
 Katz’s words at the victory  
 party  directed  aggression  
 toward the Cabán campaign  
 which often attack her ties to  
 the real estate industry as well  
 as accusations that she was the  
 “establishment” candidate. 
 “It was really hard to stand  
 up the last few weeks. We were  
 having difficult times in the  
 papers. We weren’t sure if we  
 won or lost,” Katz said. “We  
 are  entering  very  personal  
 times.  We  are  entering  very  
 complicated times, and during  
 the campaign at times people  
 made  it  seem  so  easy  –  like  
 we’re going to change this and  
 we’re going to change that. You  
 know what we need  to do, we  
 need to make sure that there is  
 justice for victims and justice  
 for defendants.” 
 Katz  also  railed  against  
 claims from Cabán supporters  
 that the process could not be  
 Congressman Gregory Meeks and Melinda Katz at Banter in Forest  
 Hills on July 29.  Photo: Mark Hallum/QNS 
 trusted on account of influence  
 from  the  Queens  County  
 Democratic Party due to their  
 role  appointing  BOE  board  
 members. There was also much  
 scorn for the use of Frank Bolz  
 and Michael Reich as attorneys  
 for  Katz  in  consideration  to  
 their history of profiting off  
 surrogate courts. 
 “I  am  incredibly  proud  
 of  this  campaign.  We  stayed  
 above the board. We held our  
 heads  high,”  Katz  continued.  
 “We talked the truth and the  
 truth, people here, they hear  
 it. They want to hear and they  
 knew they were getting it from  
 this campaign.” 
 The Monday party at  
 Banter was the antithesis of  
 the attitudes at the end of the  
 June 25 primary. 
 Election  night  numbers  
 had Cabán leading Katz by  
 over 1,100 votes out of a sevencandidate  
 field while basking  
 in  what  her  supporters  
 perceived as another upset  
 against the Queens Democratic  
 Party “machine” at Laboom  
 in Jackson Heights. But the  
 afterglow quickly diminished  
 as a count of over 3,550  
 absentee and affidavit ballots  
 placed Katz 16 votes ahead. 
 What started as a county  
 race  quickly  turned  into  a  
 national  story  that  echoed  
 the victory of Alexandria  
 Ocasio-Cortez over former  
 Congressman Joe Crowley a  
 year prior. 
 “People all over the United  
 States were watching this race  
 to see what was going to happen,  
 and you know what happened?  
 The  most  qualified,  effective,  
 reform-minded,  intelligent,  
 capable person won this race,”  
 Congressman Tom Suozzi said  
 on Monday. “Everybody loves a  
 comeback story.” 
 Read more at QNS.com. 
 TIMESLEDGER,4      AUG. 2-8, 2019 QNS.COM 
 
				
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