NEW YORK – The Florida prosecutor who brought battery charges against Donald Trump's campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, supports Hillary Clinton's campaign for president.

An article published by the Palm Beach Post on Nov. 17, 2015, has been circulating since Tuesday evening because it lists Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg as a member 150-member Florida Leadership Council, which was established by the Democratic Party to promote Hillary Clinton's presidential candidacy.

The article states that Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg and Tax Collector Anne Gannon "are also part of Clinton's Florida team."

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Mike Cernovich, writing Tuesday in the blog DangerAndPlay.com, cited the Palm Beach Post article in arguing the charges against Lewandowski were politically motivated. He contended "there was no assault," because reporter Michelle Fields "was heading towards Trump and was brushed away due to security concerns."

Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg's office hasn't yet weighed in on what it will do, Bob McGovern reported in the Boston Herald on Wednesday.

"That's probably because this high-profile case will be tough to prove in court. In Florida, you have to show that Lewandowski 'actually and intentionally' touched Fields against her will."

McGovern wrote that the "ball is in Aronberg's court now."

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"And even though he's a well-known Hillary Clinton supporter, those who know Aronberg's office say there is little reason to believe he'll try to score political points by throwing the book at Lewandowski."

The official website for the Office of State Attorney for the 15th Judicial Circuit in Palm Beach County, Florida notes Aronberg, elected state attorney for the 15th Judicial Circuit in November 2012, is a former assistant attorney general, a White House fellow in 2000 and a Florida state senator.

"Dave Aronberg was born in Miami," the Palm Beach County website continues. "He attended public schools before going on to graduate with honors from Harvard College and Harvard Law School. After graduation, he worked in the litigation department of a large South Florida law firm while also working closely with then-Insurance Commissioner Bill Nelson to investigate European insurance companies that refused to honor World War II-era policies sold to victims of the Holocaust.

"In 2010, Aronberg returned to the Florida Attorney General's Office as a special prosecutor for prescription drug trafficking," the website continues. "In his role as the Attorney General's 'Drug Czar,' Aronberg led an anti-pill mill initiative that helped clean up the pain clinic industry and reduced the record number of people dying each day from oxycodone abuse."

Concerned individuals may contact the Palm Beach County State Attorney's Office by email or by calling (561) 355-7100.

A Newsmax TV interview April 7, 2015, pitted Aronberg against Sid Dinerstein, chairman of the Republican Party of Florida, regarding how the antagonism between President Obama and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would impact Florida voters.

See the report:

Former Breitbart reporter Michelle Fields filed assault charges against Lewandowski this week, alleging the campaign manager roughed her to the point of bruising her arm. She claims video of the incident proves she was wrongfully handled.

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Trump, meanwhile, has defended Lewandowski, saying the video actually clears his campaign manager of wrongdoing. The candidate suggests Fields is using Florida law – which defines battery as just about any type of unwanted physical contact – for a political or personal agenda.

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In a tweet, Trump wrote, as WND previously reported: "Wow, Corey Lewandowski, my campaign manager and a very decent man, was just charged with assaulting a reporter. Look at tapes – nothing there!"

Watch security footage of the incident:

One unnamed Secret Service agent, meanwhile, has given a different version of events, saying in a statement to the London Daily Mail that Fields "crossed in between agents and our protectee after being told not to," and touched Trump first, WND reported.

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