Age: 47
Occupation: Attorney, former Chief Deputy for the New York State Attorney General
Education: Harvard University (B.A.)
Alvin Bragg served most recently as Chief Deputy Attorney General for New York State, where he prosecuted Harvey Weinstein and challenged the Trump administration over the citizenship question that it attempted to include in the 2020 census. Previously, Bragg served as Assistant U.S. Attorney in the Criminal Division of the Southern District of New York, under Preet Bharara, and as the Chief of Litigation & Investigations for the New York City Council. Bragg is currently a Visiting Professor of Law and the Co-Director of the Racial Justice Project at New York Law School, and a Sunday school teacher at the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem.
Bragg says that his foremost priority – if elected District Attorney – will be to end racial disparities and mass incarceration. He intends to pursue those objectives by changing the structure, policies, and culture of the office to increase transparency and accountability. Bragg’s other priorities include creating new sex crimes and police accountability units, which will report directly to the District Attorney, be “victim-centered and trauma-informed,” and publish real time public data to monitor their success; as well as stopping gun violence by tracking the origins of guns used in shootings.
Bragg has put out a plan to reform the Conviction Integrity Unit (CIU), which has underperformed in comparison to its counterpart in Brooklyn. He says he will abolish the current CIU and start a new unit, which will be monitored by an independent review board and have total independence. Bragg also intends to make “alternative sentencing,” rather than incarceration, the “default” outcome for most cases prosecuted by the office. As he puts it, “incarceration will become the ‘alternative.’” Bragg has shown a strong understanding of community concerns through the district, and a thorough and cogent policy platform, particularly on dealing with police accountability and misconduct.