His reaction came after fallout and scrutiny from recent published reports that his office is under investigation for allegations of stolen money.
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"That is absolutely not the case." Bradsher stated.
In a statement - the State Bureau of Investigation released this:
"On July 25, 2016, Superior Court Judge Joseph Crosswhite requested the SBI investigate allegations of possible theft of state funds from the Administrative Office of the Courts."
Bradsher said the SBI statement is vague and does not provide details and context.
"No money has been taken, and I want to clarify here today," Bradsher said, "the issue is whether a former employee of mine was accurate in their timekeeping of the hours that they worked. That's it."
What's not clear is what prompted the initial investigation.
Bradsher said the negative attention is politically motived by supporters of Judge Mike Gentry.
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Gentry is running for re-election, against Bradsher's Assistant D.A., J. Stultz.
"The article is being used as a weapon at the polling sites," Bradsher said. "A pending investigation of this nature should not be used as a weapon against him to be used as some type of half-truth or something nefarious."
ABC11 spoke with Judge Gentry by phone. He denied he's using the investigation for political gain.
Gentry said he did not initiate the investigation, and he has not talked to the SBI. The SBI will turn over the results of its investigation to a superior court judge who will decide what happens next.
The SBI did not give a timetable and the NC Administration of Courts did not have comment on this report.
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