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WPCNR
The Mayor Adam Bradley trial on domestic abuse charges reconvened at 2 P.M. with neighbor Alexandra Hofgaertner, a friend of Mrs. Bradley’s whose house was her refuge in the February 27-28 time when the alleged slamming-door-on-hand incident), taking the stand for cross-examination by Mr. Bradley’s defense attorney, Luis Penichet.
In an hour of cross, Mr. Penichet established that Ms. Hofgaertner was not physically present to witness any of alleged acts of abuse Mrs. Bradley accuses the Mayor of committing against her, that she often advised Mrs. Bradley of actions to take to get rid of the Bradley’s au pair and what to do to get an order of protection, even advised how to get Mr. Bradley how to pay expenses he was forcing Mrs. Bradley to pay.
He asked if Mrs. Hofgaertner’s boyfriend had ever been offered a job by Mayor Bradley. She said no, he had not. Mr. Penichet pointed out that Mr. DiBlasi had been Chief of Staff in
In the late afternoon, Fumiko Bradley took the stand. She was in the process of explaining the sequence of the alleged door-slam incident February 27, and making it clear to the judge who had questions about Mrs. Bradley’s position and side of the door she was one, when the Judge, noticing the late hour declared recess until Tuesday morning.
Asked if she advised Fumiko Bradley to got to a marriage counselor, Hofgaertner’s answer was “No,” and did you suggest she (Fumiko Bradley) call the police, Hofgaertner said “Yes.”
He asked whether she had ever advised Mrs. Bradley how to get rid of the au pair (Yuko Watanabe), how to force Mr. Bradley to pay for vacation trips which he had been forcing her to pay, or to go to the police…she said “Not true.” to the first two questions and True to the third.
Subsequently in later testimony, Mr. Penichet confronted Ms. Hoefgaertner with a series of e-mails, which contracting those statements that she did not advise Fumiko depicted Ms. Hofgaertner as the signor. In each instance, Ms. Hofgaertner, first said, “I do not remember.” Penichet had the baliff show Hofgaertner the e-mails, and asked her if she wrote them. She said yes. Each of the e-mails Penichet selected found Ms. Hoefgaertner advising Mrs. Bradley in the e-mails on the matters Penichet had asked her about if she had done those things. This was an oft-repeated exercise of Penichet asking a question about an action and Ms. Hoefgaertner saying she did not remember was repeated again and again, the upshot indicating a pattern of Hoefgaertner advising Mrs. Bradley on actions to take in her relationship with Mr. Bradley.
In previous questioning, Mr. Penichet introduced a memo to Audrey Stone ( the prosecutor), which was written from Ms. Hofgaertner, on March 13, fifteen days after the Mayor was arrested and charged, complaining about “slanderous” comments made about her in the media, and she wanted the prosecutor to do something about it.
Audrey Stone, the lead prosecutor objected saying the memorandum was irrelevant and hearsay, “a collateral item,” and nothing to do directly with the incidents in the charges. Penichet quoted from the
Judge Capeci took a 15-minute recess to consider, and came back saying she should would allow the memo (which Penichet told WPCNR was given him by the District Attorney).
Penichet used the memo to show in his opinion, Ms. Hofgaertner was concerned about her being slandered in the media and in the memo, said that if the district attorney did not do something about it she would (this is paraphrasing). He got Hofgaertner to say she was referring to the Mayor, his chief of staff, John Callahan. He got Ms. Hofgaertner to admit on the stand that she leaked the sequence of emails between her and Mrs. Bradley to Fox News because she was worred about her reputation.
Tying it together, Penichet wrapped up with Ms. Hofgaertner by getting her to once again, after saying she could not remember if she had written comments to the effect that that Mrs. Bradley should go to the police, and get an order of protection, just before the door-slamming incident. Hofgaertner, visibly upset at this time, being shown another e-mail with her name on it by the bailiff remembered and said “Yes,” she had written it.
At times during these long “I do not remember” sequences of questioning, Judge Capeci overruled noticeably infrequent objections by Ms. Stone, saying to Ms. Hofgaertner, the witness, at one point, the judge asked “Does this help your recollection?” as one e-mail was shown for Ms. Hofgaertner to identify.
Penichet’s point was that Hofgaertner had with her e-mails orchestrated Mrs. Bradley’s befhavior. He also got Hofgaertner to admit she had been going through a divorce at the time the Bradley incidents occurred.
Audrey Stone, the Prosecutor, attempted to bolster Ms. Hofgaertner, quoting a portion of Fumiko Bradley’s e-mails which Ms. Hofgaertner had answered, in which Mrs. Bradley was asking what should she do. Hofgaertner, tearfully said, “she was just trying to help.”
At 3:45 P.M. Fumiko Bradley was called to the stand with the Assistant Prosecutor handling the direct testimony. Mrs. Bradley described the tea throwing incident of January 11 and was in the midst of describing the alleged door-slam-on-her fingers on February 27 when court action was adjourned for the day at 4:45 P.M.
Mrs. Bradley said that Ms. Hofgaertner was the one person she felt she could talk to, and that was because Ms. Hofgaertner was going through a divorce at the time. The Assistant Prosecutor showed some photographs of the interior of the Bradley home.
In describing the tea incident, Mrs. Bradley said she did not know why Mr. Bradley threw the tea at her, and that she left the children with Mr. Bradley at the time. She described her injuring as reddish skin and that she did not seek medical attention.
The Assistant Prosecutor then lead her to a discussion of how the alleged door incident developed. She said she went up to the bedroom to ask Mr. Bradley to attend a traditional Japanese event for his daughters. Mr. Bradley reacted badly, she said attempting to “push her out of the bedroom, and from the way she described it, he was behind her dragging her out the bedroom door, holding her left hand with his left hand. She said she was afraid “he was going to push me down the stairs again (about 7 steps)” and Mr. Bradley reaching around her waist, slammed the door, on three fingers of her left hand high on the doorjam.
Judge Capeci found this confusing and asked Mrs. Bradley to demonstrate it. Mrs. Bradley was in the process of doing so, when the Judge noting the clock, adjourned for the day.






