New Jersey people and places are all over Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s report released Thursday.

That’s not a surprise considering President Donald Trump has so many ties to the Garden State, owning three golf courses here and surrounding himself with Jersey-bred allies.

Jared Kushner, Trump’s Jersey-born son-in-law, comes up repeatedly in the report. So does former Gov. Chris Christie. There are also cameos from Trump’s Bedminister golf club and Teterboro Airport.

Here are all the Jersey moments in the 448-page report:

KUSHNER A KEY FIGURE

Kushner, a top Trump adviser who was raised in Livingston as part of a prominent New Jersey family, is mentioned dozens of times in the report. His name is listed 263 times, to be exact.

One key passage details how Kushner attended a summer 2016 meeting at Trump Tower in New York City that Donald Trump Jr. set up with a Russian attorney promising dirt of Hillary Clinton, Trump’s opponent.

At one point, according to the report, Kushner became aggravated. “What are we doing here?” he asked.

Kushner also texted Paul Manafort, Trump’s campaign chairman, that this was a “waste of time.” Kushner left before the meeting was over.

The report also examines Kushner’s November 2016 meeting with Sergey Kislyak, the Russian ambassador to the U.S, and his December 2016 meeting with Sergey Gorkov, the head of Russia’s state bank.

BEDMINSTER AND THE FIRING OF JAMES COMEY

Trump’s private golf course off Route 206 in Somerset County was the setting for the president’s controversial decision to fire FBI Director James Comey in May 2017. Comey originally oversaw the Russia investigation.

Two days after Comey testified before Congress, Trump dined with Kushner and other advisers and family members at the Bedminster club. There, the president said he wanted Comey gone, according to the report.

Trump then laid out the way the termination letter should be written to Comey. He made edits throughout the weekend, the report said.

Comey was fired the following Tuesday.

THE ATLANTIC CITY NATIVE WHO REFUSED TO REMOVE MUELLER

Don McGahn, an Atlantic City native who served as White House counsel until this past fall, is one of the central figures in the report. His name is mentioned 527 times.

In a critical passage, Trump called McGahn repeatedly in June 2017 to say Mueller — who was appointed to oversee the investigation after Comey’s firing — had to be removed because of conflicts.

McGahn said he considered the conflicts “silly” and “not real," and he did not intend to act on the president’s wishes, according to the report. Instead, McGahn warned White House officials he was prepared to resign.

Trump backed off. McGahn didn’t step down this past October.

CHRISTIE AND TRUMP

Trump turned to Christie, a longtime friend and ally and former federal prosecutor, multiple times over the last few years to ask his advice on how to handle the Russia investigation, according to the report.

Notably, in February 2017 — the early days of the probe — Trump asked Christie to call Comey to tell him the president “likes him” and that “he’s part of the team," according to an interview Trump gave the special counsel’s office.

Christie said he didn’t follow through, calling the situation was uncomfortable.

In another key passage, Christie said Trump asked him in June 2017 whether he should remove Mueller as special counsel. Christie said he advised against it.

The ex-governor’s name is mentioned 62 times in the report.

TETERBORO CAMEO

There’s a passing reference in the report to Teterboro Airport in Bergen County.

It comes during the section describing a pair of 2016 meetings between Paul Manafort, Trump’s then-campaign chairman, and Konstantin Kilimnik, a Russian political consultant.

The report says a private jet owned by Oleg Deripaska, an oligarch with ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin, flew to Teterboro on Aug. 2. Kiliminik met with Manafort in New York City that day.

But the report said Kiliminik flew commercial to New York.

JEROME CORSI

A minor figure in the report is Jerome Corsi, a conservative author and commentator who lives in Denville.

Corsi was subpoenaed by the special counsel related to WikiLeaks releasing emails from Hillary Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta just weeks before the 2016 election. Corsi claimed to help coordinate the effort.

NJ Advance Media staff writers Ted Sherman and S.P. Sullivan contributed to this report.

Brent Johnson may be reached at bjohnson@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @johnsb01.

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