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Consultant: I conspired with AG

3 min read
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NORRISTOWN – A political consultant told jurors Thursday he “conspired” with Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane to pin a grand jury leak on her top deputy.

Consultant Josh Morrow testified under a grant of immunity at Kane’s perjury and corruption trial in suburban Philadelphia.

Morrow said he met with Kane in August 2014 to concoct a “story” about how the secret criminal files on an NAACP official ended up in a newspaper.

They decided to blame the leak on top deputy Adrian King, he said.

Morrow admitted he even told the story to a grand jury, though he said he tweaked it at a second appearance as it began to “unravel.” Only this week, he said, is he really coming clean.

“We had conspired to create this story that wasn’t true,” Morrow said, “that Kathleen Kane never saw the documents and that Adrian was the one who told me about (them).”

He said Kane leaked the material as she became “unhinged” over her feud with a rival prosecutor who had embarrassed her in the press. She knew the prosecutor, Frank Fina, had shut down a 2009 investigation of an NAACP leader from Philadelphia, J. Whyatt Mondesire.

“I think she was just hell-bent on getting back at Frank Fina,” Morrow said.

King, earlier in the day, admitted he passed the packet from Kane to Morrow, but said he never knew what it contained. Morrow, though, said he told King it contained secret files on Mondesire.

Morrow’s phone records show a series of calls that took place that day between Kane, King, Morrow and a friend Morrow called for advice after Kane allegedly asked him to leak the documents. Unbeknownst to Morrow, the FBI was listening when he called the politically connected friend, John Lisko. Their April 22, 2014, phone call was played in court Thursday.

Morrow, on the tape, complains there was no overall strategy behind the leak and Kane instead operated in “scattershot” fashion. Lisko advises him not to do it, but he didn’t heed the advice.

“It’s embarrassing to come in here and admit I lied. It’s hurtful to my career. It’s hurtful to my relationships,” Morrow testified. “I lied in the grand jury to protect Kathleen.”

He also did so to protect himself, he admitted on cross-examination.

Kane has said she neither leaked any documents she had sworn to keep secret nor lied about it to the grand jury. She remains in office, although she has lost her law license.

King, who had dated Kane in law school, said he took a steep pay cut to spend a year in public service as her top deputy. But their relationship grew strained, and King felt she more than once “tried to set me up.”

King endured four appearances before a grand jury, but was never charged in the case. He has returned to his far more lucrative job as a partner at a Philadelphia law firm.

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