Order to drop New York Mayor Adams' case roils Justice Department as
high-ranking officials resign
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[February 14, 2025]
By LARRY NEUMEISTER, ALANNA DURKIN RICHER and ERIC TUCKER
NEW YORK (AP) — Manhattan’s top federal prosecutor, Danielle Sassoon,
and five high-ranking Justice Department officials resigned Thursday
after she refused an order to drop corruption charges against New York
City Mayor Eric Adams — a stunning escalation in a dayslong standoff
over the Trump administration prioritizing political aims over criminal
culpability.
Sassoon, a Republican who was interim U.S. attorney for the Southern
District of New York, accused the department of acceding to a “quid pro
quo” — dropping the case to ensure Adams’ help with Trump’s immigration
agenda — and said she was “confident” the Democratic mayor committed the
crimes spelled out in his indictment, and even more. Before the
showdown, Sassoon said, prosecutors had been preparing to charge Adams
with destroying evidence and instructing others to destroy evidence and
provide false information to the FBI.
“I remain baffled by the rushed and superficial process by which this
decision was reached,” Sassoon wrote Trump's new attorney general, Pam
Bondi, on Wednesday. The Associated Press obtained a copy of the letter.
The acting deputy U.S. attorney general, former Trump personal lawyer
Emil Bove, had ordered on Monday that the Adams case be dropped. He told
Sassoon, in a letter accepting her resignation that she was “incapable
of fairly and impartially" reviewing the circumstances of the case. Bove
placed case prosecutors on administrative leave and said they and
Sassoon would be subject to internal investigations.
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In Bove's letter, also obtained by the AP, he said the Justice
Department in Washington would file a motion to drop Adams’ charges and
bar “further targeting” of the mayor. As of Thursday evening, Adams’
case was still active and no new paperwork had been filed.
The department’s public integrity section, which had been asked to take
over the case, was also roiled by resignations.
The acting chief, three deputy chiefs and a deputy assistant attorney
general in the criminal division who oversaw the section resigned,
according to a person familiar with the matter who spoke on condition of
anonymity to discuss personnel matters.
The departures amounted to a stunning condemnation of the actions of the
department's leadership just days after a close Trump ally, former
Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, was sworn in as attorney general.
Just three weeks into Trump’s second term, the department has been
rocked by firings, transfers and resignations.
Adams pleaded not guilty last September to charges that while in his
prior role as Brooklyn borough president, he accepted over $100,000 in
illegal campaign contributions and lavish travel perks such as expensive
flight upgrades, luxury hotel stays and even a trip to a bathhouse from
people wanting to buy his influence. He has denied any wrongdoing.
Federal agents had also been investigating some of Adams’ aides. It was
unclear what will happen to that part of the investigation.
In a memo Monday, Bove had directed Sassoon to drop the case as soon as
practicable, so the mayor of America's largest city could help with
Trump’s immigration crackdown and could himself campaign for reelection
unencumbered by criminal charges. Adams faces multiple challengers in
June’s primary.
On Wednesday, after two days without action or public statements from
Sassoon’s office, Bondi said she would “look into” why the case had yet
to be dismissed. That same day, Sassoon laid out her objections to
dropping the case in an eight-page letter to the attorney general.
Sassoon accused Adams’ lawyers of offering what amounted to a “quid pro
quo” — the mayor’s assistance to the White House on immigration if the
case were dropped — when they met with Justice Department officials in
Washington last month.
“It is a breathtaking and dangerous precedent to reward Adams’s
opportunistic and shifting commitments on immigration and other policy
matters with dismissal of a criminal indictment,” Sassoon wrote.
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This image provided by Office of the New York Mayor shows New York
Mayor Eric Adams as he speaks during an address from City Hall,
Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025. (Ed Reed/Office of the New York Mayor via
AP)
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Adams’ lawyer, Alex Spiro, said Thursday the "quid pro quo" claim
was a “total lie.”
“We offered nothing and the department asked nothing of us,” Spiro
wrote in an email to the AP. “We were asked if the case had any
bearing on national security and immigration enforcement and we
truthfully answered it did.”
The dueling letters from Sassoon in New York and Bove in Washington
laid bare in starkly personal language the gravity of a simmering,
behind-the-scenes dispute over the handling of one of the Justice
Department’s most significant current public corruption cases.
The outcome not only threatens to create an irrevocable fissure in
the relationship between department headquarters and one of its
largest and most prestigious prosecutor's offices, but also risks
reinforcing the perception that the administration will employ a
transactional approach to law enforcement decisions.
The U.S. attorney's office for the Southern District of New York has
a track record of tackling Wall Street malfeasance, political
corruption and international terrorism. It has a tradition of
independence from Washington, earned it the nickname “the sovereign
district.”
Matthew Podolsky, who has spent a decade in the office, was made the
new acting U.S. attorney after Sassoon's departure. He was named
Sassoon’s top deputy only days ago.
Bove’s directive to drop the case was all the more remarkable
because Bove had been a longtime prosecutor and supervisor in the
Southern District, and because department leaders are historically
reluctant to intervene in cases where charges have been brought.
Bove, who went into private practice before rejoining government,
represented Trump as a defense lawyer in his recent criminal cases.
Bove's memo steered clear of any legal basis for the dismissal. His
emphasis on political considerations, rather than evaluating the
strength of the evidence, alarmed some career prosecutors who said
it was a departure from long-standing norms.
Sassoon, a former clerk for the late U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Antonin Scalia, was not the prosecutor who charged Adams. That was
then-U.S. Attorney Damian Williams, who stepped down after Trump won
reelection.
Sassoon was appointed as interim U.S. attorney Jan. 21, the day
after Trump took office, and it was supposed to be a short-term
assignment. Trump in November said he would nominate Jay Clayton, a
former U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission chairman.
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This is the second Justice Department tussle in five years between
Washington and New York to result in a dramatic leadership turnover.
In 2020, during Trump’s first term, then-U.S. Attorney Geoffrey
Berman was pushed out in a surprise nighttime announcement. Berman
initially refused to resign, creating a brief standoff with the
then-U.S. attorney general, William Barr, but he did leave after
being assured his investigations into Trump’s allies would not be
disturbed.
Prosecutors said they had proof that Adams personally directed
political aides to solicit foreign donations and disguise them to
help the campaign qualify for a city program that provides a
generous, publicly-funded match for small dollar donations. Under
federal law, foreign nationals are banned from contributing to U.S.
election campaigns.
As recently as Jan. 6, prosecutors had indicated their investigation
remained active, writing in court papers that they continued to
“uncover additional criminal conduct by Adams.” __
Richer and Tucker reported from Washington. Associated Press writers
Jake Offenhartz and Michael R. Sisak contributed to this report.
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