By Josh Dawsey 

New Jersey's proposed $225 million settlement with Exxon Mobil Corp. for years of environmental damage came under scrutiny Thursday, as legislators and environmentalists called for separate probes and rejection of the deal.

During a court battle spanning a decade, state officials had argued for $8.9 billion. Exxon officials called that unreasonable. The Christie administration defended the settlement Thursday and released some details.

"This important settlement, which came about because this administration aggressively pushed the case to trial, is the result of long fought settlement negotiations that pre-dated and post-dated the trial," Attorney General John Hoffman said.

The settlement is subject to approval by a state judge after a 30-day comment period.

The state called the damage "staggering and unprecedented," citing environmental experts and others in the litigation. A judge had been expected to rule on damages later this year. Mr. Christie's administration sought a delay while it apparently negotiated with Exxon.

Officials on both sides hadn't expected the state to score the full $8.9 billion. But many questioned on Thursday whether New Jersey whether New Jersey had settled too cheaply.

Senator Raymond Lesniak, a Democrat who represents the area, vowed to challenge the settlement "every step of the way" until the state got what he called "just compensation" for damage done by the company's Bayway and Bayonne refineries to more than 1,500 acres of wetlands, meadows and waterways.

"Apparently, this administration took it out of the hands of the career attorneys handling toxic contamination cases for the attorney general and the Department of Environmental Protection and had the governor's office engineer a depleted settlement," Sen. Lesniak said Thursday.

The Christie administration said the settlement was the largest environmental settlement in the state's history and that it was committed to the environment.

The settlement came within a year of Exxon Mobil giving $500,000 to the Republican Governors Association, which Mr. Christie led in 2014, trumpeting its record fundraising numbers.

While the company has long given to the organization, its 2014 donation was its second highest annual donation to the group. Exxon has in the past given $100,000 or $200,000 to the organization per year, though it gave $625,000 in 2010.

The donations far exceeded what the company gave to the Democratic Governors Association, according to federal filings.

An Exxon spokesman said the donations had nothing to do with Mr. Christie leading the group and reflected a number of competitive gubernatorial races in 2014. The spokesman also said the company gave more to Republicans than Democrats because it generally agreed with the GOP more on policy.

Mr. Christie's office didn't respond to a request for comment on the donations.

Critics noted Mr. Christie blocked legislative attempts to require the state to use all settlement funds to repair the environment. Only the first $50 million is tagged for the remediation, the remainder is to go toward balancing the state budget.

The governor faces a challenging budget cycle as he eyes 2016, with pressure from Democrats to raise taxes for the broke transportation trust fund. He has paid less than promised into the state's pension system because of lagging revenues.

The state said it wouldn't receive any of the Exxon money until 2016.

Bradley Campbell, a former commissioner of New Jersey's Department of Environmental Protection, said on Thursday Mr. Christie's top lawyer interfered in the case and pushed aside longtime officials who had worked on the case. Christopher Porrino, the attorney, also traveled with Mr. Christie for RGA duties. In a release, Mr. Christie's administration said the governor's office consulted on the case. Mr. Porrino didn't respond to a request for comment.

State Senate President Stephen Sweeney, a Democrat, said federal investigators should probe whether Mr. Christie's office interfered with the attorney general's negotiations and that lawmakers were seeking related documents.

"If what is alleged took place, than this is much bigger than any kind litigation and its subject matter for Paul Fishman," Mr. Sweeney said during an unrelated press call Thursday. "We have to dig down to the bottom of it."

Kevin Roberts, a spokesman for the governor, called the criticism "absurd and baseless," noting Mr. Campbell's Democratic affiliation.

Heather Haddon contributed to this article

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