Mark F. Pomerantz, a former prosecutor who once assisted Donald Trump's criminal investigation, will testify before the House Judiciary Committee in a closed-door deposition on May 12. This decision puts to rest the legal dispute between Alvin L. Bragg, the Manhattan District Attorney, and Republican lawmakers, who had summoned Pomerantz to testify. Pomerantz worked with the Manhattan district attorney's office for a year but quit more than a year before Donald Trump was indicted. In the past, he wrote a book that chronicled his frustration with Bragg's handling of the investigation. The House Judiciary Committee subpoenaed Pomerantz in April, just after Bragg charged Trump with plotting the cover-up of a hush-money payment made to a porn star in 2016. Bragg then sued Jim Jordan, the committee's chairman, alleging that it was interfering with the district attorney's conduct after Trump's indictment. After a federal judge refused to block the interview, Bragg and Pomerantz have appealed to the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. The appeals court postponed the interview, which was originally scheduled for Thursday. In negotiations between both parties' lawyers, they reached a resolution that allows Bragg's general counsel, Leslie Dubeck, to be present for Pomerantz's questioning.