New York City Mayor Eric Adams was indicted Thursday on charges that he took illegal campaign contributions and bribes from foreign nationals in exchange for favors that included helping Turkish officials get fire safety approvals for a new diplomatic building in the city.
Adams, a former police officer, faces conspiracy, wire fraud and bribery charges in a five-count indictment that describes a decade-long trail of crimes.
The U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan alleges in the indictment that Adams “not only accepted, but sought illegal campaign contributions” to his mayoral campaign. A senior official in the Turkish diplomatic establishment “facilitated many straw donations” to Adams and arranged for Adams and his companions to receive free or discounted travel on Turkey’s national airline to destinations including France, China, Sri Lanka, India, Hungary, and Turkey, the indictment alleges.
Adams “compounded his gains” from the illegal campaign contributions by gaming the city’s matching funds program, which provides a generous match for small dollar donations. His campaign received more than $10,000 in matching funds as a result of the false certifications, according to the indictment.
Adams allegedly “solicited and demanded” bribes, including free and heavily discounted luxury travel benefits from a Turkish official, the indictment alleges, noting that the official was seeking Adams’ help pertaining to regulations of the Turkish consulate in Manhattan. Adams created and instructed others to create fake paper trails in order to falsely suggest he had paid for travel benefits that were actually free, prosecutors allege. He also deleted messages with others involved in his misconduct, at one point assuring a co-conspirator that he “always” deleted her text messages, according to the indictment.
The charges were made public hours after FBI agents entered the mayor’s official residence and seized his phone early Thursday.
“Federal agents appeared this morning at Gracie Mansion in an effort to create a spectacle (again) and take Mayor Adams phone (again),” Adams’ lawyer, Alex Spiro, said in a statement hours before the indictment was made public. “They send a dozen agents to pick up a phone when we would have happily turned it in.”
In a video speech released Wednesday night, Adams vowed to fights any charges against him, claiming he had been made a “target” in a case “based on lies.”
“I will fight these injustices with every ounce of my strength and my spirit,” he said.
The indictment caps off an extraordinary few weeks in New York City, as federal investigators have honed in on members of Adams’ inner circle, producing a drum-beat of raids, subpoenas and high-level resignations that have thrust City Hall into crisis.
The U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan has declined to comment on the investigation, though it said it would announce “significant public corruption charges” at an 11:30 a.m. news conference. An FBI spokesperson declined to comment. A spokesperson for the mayor did not immediately respond to questions Thursday morning.
Adams spent 22 years in New York City’s police department before going into politics, first as a state senator and then as Brooklyn borough president. He was elected as the city’s second Black mayor in 2021.
In a video speech released Wednesday night, Adams vowed to fight any charges against him, claiming he had been made a “target” in a case “based on lies.”
Gov. Kathy Hochul has the power to remove Adams from office. Her spokesperson, Avi Small, issued a statement late Wednesday that said “Governor Hochul is aware of these concerning news reports and is monitoring the situation. It would be premature to comment further until the matter is confirmed by law enforcement.”
The indictment caps off an extraordinary few weeks in New York City, as federal investigators have homed in on members of Adams’ inner circle, producing a drum-beat of raids, subpoenas and high-level resignations.
Federal prosecutors are believed to be leading multiple, separate inquiries involving Adams and his senior aides, relatives of those aides, campaign fundraising and possible influence peddling of the police and fire departments.
In the last two weeks alone, the city’s police commissioner and head of the school’s system have announced their resignations.
FBI agents had seized Adams’ electronic devices nearly a year ago as part of an investigation focused, at least partly, on campaign contributions and Adams’ interactions with the Turkish government. Because the charges were sealed, it was unknown whether they dealt with those same matters.
In early September, federal investigators seized devices from his police commissioner, schools chancellor, two deputy mayors and other trusted confidants both in and out of City Hall.
All have denied wrongdoing.
(AP)
11 Responses
What about Harris’s campaign being funded by Soros? That is legal?
@Philosopher – corruption is wrong regardless of which team the politician plays for
bem684, corruption being wrong is irrelevent in this case where it is the corrupt politicians going after an allegedly another corrupt politician due to political motivations.
Philosopher: Unless you are clueless, Ungarishe American Citizens like George Soros have the same right to donate to political campaigns (subject to certain limits) as naturalized American Citizens from countries such as South Africa (aka Elon Musk). While there are limits on donations to individual candidates, under the Supreme Court decision in Citizens United, there are virtually no limits on donations to PACs that support the candidates but don’t “coordinate” directly.
The FEC website shows that as of August 30th, George Soros, his son Alex Soros and other family members had donated a total of $13.2 million this election cycle to Harris and PACs supporting her campaign. They’ve also donated another $9.6 million to Democratic congressional candidates. By comparison, just TWO Republican donors, Tim Mellon and Miriam Adelson had given over $190 million to Trump with several other donors individually over $10 million.
At least thusfar, Harris’ campaign has been very successful in raising money through smaller donations although they have several multi-million dollar donors.
whatever comes of this development suffice it to say Mayor Adams has been steadfastly strong for Jewish community and Israel
He should’ve got his phone from the Israelis, then they could’ve blown it up for him while it is in FBI possession
Soros is also making big donations in state and local campaigns to Democratic candidates. For example, he has given over $10 million to various PACs supporting the Democratic challenger to Ted Cruz in Texas.
George Soros is both an American citizen and a private individual. His political contributions are perfectly legal.
Adams is a public official. He is indicted for taking political contributions from a foreign entity (ILLEGAL) and accepting bribes to smooth approval of the Turkish Consulate in NYC.
Leaving politics out (campaign contributions), if he accepted the bribes, he should be removed from office and if convicted; not only have to make restitution to the city but should serve a substantial federal prison sentence.
The people of NY deserve better and more honest governance than Adams.
that’s why you only elect very wealthy people to be leaders that cant be bribed chazal knew everything
Jumaanee Williams is less corrupt. He lives in Flatbush.
What is the real reason our mayor was indicted?