New York mayor vows to regain public's trust after Justice Department
orders halt to prosecution
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[February 12, 2025]
By JAKE OFFENHARTZ and LARRY NEUMEISTER
NEW YORK (AP) — New York City Mayor Eric Adams vowed to regain the
public’s trust Tuesday as the Justice Department moved to halt his
criminal corruption case, an extraordinary directive that officials said
would free him up to assist in the Trump administration’s immigration
crackdown.
In his first public comments since federal prosecutors were ordered to
drop the case, Adams said he was eager to “put this cruel episode behind
us and focus entirely on the future of this city.”
He did not mention President Donald Trump by name but praised the
Justice Department for its “honesty," adding that he would "never put
any personal benefit above my solemn responsibility as your mayor.”
The mayor's brief address at City Hall came one day after acting Deputy
Attorney General Emil Bove told federal prosecutors in Manhattan to
dismiss the bribery charges “as soon as is practicable.”
In a two-page memo, Bove said the Justice Department reached the
decision “without assessing the strength of the evidence.” Rather, he
claimed the case was politically motivated and said the dismissal would
allow Adams to “devote full attention and resources” to combating
illegal immigration and violent crime.
Adams, who was elected as a centrist Democrat, had already shifted
rightward following his indictment in September, praising Trump and
expressing a willingness to roll back some of the city’s protections for
undocumented migrants. But in the wake of the memo, he is facing a
barrage of criticism from those who say he is now beholden to the Trump
administration’s agenda.
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“It certainly sounds like President Trump is holding the Mayor hostage,”
Rev. Al Sharpton, an influential ally of Adams, said in a statement
Tuesday. “I have supported the Mayor, but he has been put in an unfair
position — even for him — of essentially political blackmail."
Several of the mayor’s challengers in the Democratic Party also
suggested Adams would now put Trump’s interests over those of New
Yorkers. Asked on Tuesday if the mayor was compromised, Gov. Kathy
Hochul, a Democrat, responded: “I truly don’t know.”
The task of carrying out the Justice Department's order now falls to
Danielle Sassoon, a seasoned prosecutor who was appointed acting U.S.
attorney in Manhattan just days after Trump took office.
Her office declined to comment and has not indicated what it plans to do
next. In a letter sent last month, prosecutors in the Adams case praised
the strength of the evidence, dismissing the mayor's claim of political
prosecution as an attempt “to shift the focus away from the evidence of
his guilt.”
Sassoon has limited power to oppose the order. She can be replaced at
will by the Justice Department. Trump in November nominated Jay Clayton,
the former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, to lead
the office. His appointment must be confirmed by the Senate.
Under the terms laid out in the memo, the charges could still be refiled
after the November mayoral election. Dismissal of the case should be
conditional, Bove said, on Adams agreeing in writing that prosecutors
are legally allowed to bring the charges back if they choose.
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New York City Mayor Eric Adams speaks during a press conference at
City Hall, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki
Iwamura)
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That means the threat of a renewed prosecution will hover over Adams
in all of his dealings with the Trump administration while he is
mayor.
“I have not seen anything like this before,” said Arlo Devlin-Brown,
the former chief of public corruption at the U.S. attorney’s office
in Manhattan. “For a case that’s already been charged to be reversed
in the absence of some real new development in the merits of the
case is highly unusual.”
Even with some uncertainty about what happens next, Adams struck a
tone of vindication Tuesday, describing the criminal prosecution
against him as an “unnecessary ordeal” that had been sensationalized
in the media.
“Who I am is not in the headlines, it’s in my history,” he said. “As
I said from the outset, I never broke the law and I never would.”
Federal prosecutors charged Adams in September with accepting
illegal campaign contributions and lavish travel perks worth more
than $100,000 — including expensive flight upgrades and luxury hotel
stays — while serving in his previous job as Brooklyn borough
president.
The indictment said a Turkish official who helped facilitate the
trips then leaned on Adams for favors, including lobbying the Fire
Department to allow a newly constructed diplomatic building to open
in time for a planned visit by Turkey’s president.
Prosecutors also said they had evidence Adams personally directed
campaign staffers to solicit foreign donations, then disguised those
contributions to qualify for a city program that provides a
generous, publicly funded match for small donations. Foreign
nationals are banned from contributing to U.S. election campaigns
under federal law.
Adams was set to stand in trial in April.
In addition to the charges brought against him, federal prosecutors
had homed in on several high-ranking members of his administration,
producing a drumbeat of raids and subpoenas that prompted
resignations from his police commissioner, schools chancellor and
multiple deputy mayors, as well as the director of Asian affairs and
other top advisers.
It was not immediately clear what, if anything, will become of those
inquiries. It was also not known how the directive would affect
defendants tied to Adams already facing charges.
Just last week, federal prosecutors said City Hall's chief liaison
to the Muslim community would plead guilty to collecting illegal
campaign contributions on behalf of the Adams campaign. In January,
a Brooklyn real estate magnate pleaded guilty to helping channel
illegal foreign campaign contributions to Adams.
Attorneys for those men did not immediately return messages seeking
comment.
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