Eric Adams Is Indicted Following Federal Corruption Investigation

Source: adham7897

28 Comments

  1. lol couldn’t have happened to a nicer guy. I mean it, it couldn’t have happened to a nicer guy, because he is a piece of shit.

  2. thepartypantser on

    I am all for holding ANY political figure accountable for their crimes.

    Now if we can just get those who vote GOP to feel that way.

  3. not surprising given the amount of people around him getting brought in. Hope the voters choose better next time.

  4. shonkshonkshonk on

    Hmmm, I guess it’s pretty obvious why he was talking so much about Eliminating Rats at his First Ever Rat Summit.

  5. I’m so happy!!! I actually said a celebratory “yes” alone in my room when I read the notification.

    Get this man the fuck out of here. Literally the only thing every New Yorker I know agrees on is that he’s trash and a terrible mayor. I’ve lived here for two decades and none of the other mayors came close to this level of equal opportunity hatred.

    Edit- a word

  6. I voted for Adams but I’m also not in a cult so I think he should resign and face a full and fair prosecution

  7. > a retired police captain who was elected as New York City’s 110th mayor

    Guys, I think I found your problem. Jokes aside; break the law and face a judge/jury.

  8. Monkey-bone-zone on

    I just can’t believe it. Everything was going so well for him lately, too. 🙂 🙂

    Sorry, NYC. You coulda had a Maya Wiley.

  9. WafflePartyOrgy on

    >Eric L. Adams, a retired police captain who was elected as New York City’s 110th mayor nearly three years ago on a promise to rein in crime, has been indicted following a federal corruption investigation, people with knowledge of the matter said on Wednesday.

    >The indictment remained sealed on Wednesday night, and it was unclear what charge or charges Mr. Adams will face. But when they are made public, he will become the first New York City mayor to be criminally charged while in office.

    Hard to imagine.

    >The indictment promised to reverberate across the nation’s largest city and beyond, plunging Mr. Adams’s embattled administration further into chaos just months before he is set to face challengers in a hotly contested mayoral primary.

    Theoretically this sort of thing would affect his reelection chances.

  10. So I’m a lifelong New Yorker and a lifelong Democrat.

    Why am I not reflexively calling this a witch hunt?

    Eric Adams is a crook and I want to see him resign and then face accountability for his actions. Why are Republicans so diseased that they don’t feel the same way about Trump?

  11. Ive been calling it for years. This guy screams NPD criminal. From his days as a shady cop to clearly lying and gaslighting about his residence to those weird videos of treating your kids like drug dealers, I knew this guy was a crook.

    His first act as mayor illegally installing cronies should have been an instant indictment back then.

  12. >he will become the first New York City mayor to be criminally charged while in office.

    “while in office”

    Important distinction, heh.

  13. For those taking notes at home, this is what “draining the swamp” looks like in reality. Non-partisan investigations performed by the Justice Department without prejudice or interference from the party in power.

  14. But but I was told the government only targets the GOP.
    Anyway good fuck this corrupt POS, we all knew it was coming has more and more of his inner circle began to fall.

    Also interesting I don’t see any Dems, screaming witch hunt!. Amazing what happens when one party holds others accountable

  15. Alternative_Car_3823 on

    Fuck paywalls here’s the article.

    Eric L. Adams, a retired police captain who was elected as New York City’s 110th mayor nearly three years ago on a promise to rein in crime, has been indicted following a federal corruption investigation, people with knowledge of the matter said on Wednesday.

    The indictment remained sealed on Wednesday night, and it was unclear what charges Mr. Adams will face. But the federal investigation has focused at least in part on whether Mr. Adams and his campaign conspired with the Turkish government to receive illegal foreign donations.

    When the indictment is made public, Mr. Adams will become the first New York City mayor to be criminally charged while in office.

    The indictment promised to reverberate across the nation’s largest city and beyond, plunging Mr. Adams’s embattled administration further into chaos just months before he is set to face challengers in a hotly contested mayoral primary.

    In a statement, Mayor Eric Adams said he had done nothing wrong.

    “I always knew that if I stood my ground for New Yorkers that I would be a target — and a target I became,” he said. “If I am charged, I am innocent and I will fight this with every ounce of my strength and spirit.”

    Brendan R. McGuire and Boyd M. Johnson III, partners at WilmerHale who represent the mayor, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Representatives of the U.S. attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York, the F.B.I. and the city’s Department of Investigation declined to comment.

    The indictment represented an extraordinary turnabout for Mr. Adams, 64, a former state senator and Brooklyn borough president who took office as the city was rebounding from the pandemic and about to confront a massive influx of migrants from the southern border.

    It grew out of an investigation by the F.B.I. and federal prosecutors in Manhattan that began more than two years ago and was focused at least in part on the possible foreign donations, and on whether Mr. Adams pressured officials in the Fire Department to sign off on the opening of a new high-rise consulate building for the Turkish government despite safety concerns. The investigators were also examining whether Mr. Adams accepted pricey flights and upgrades on Turkish Airlines, which is partly owned by the Turkish government.

    The inquiry remained secret until late last year, when an F.B.I. search of his chief fund-raiser’s home thrust it into public view. After searching the home of the fund-raiser, Brianna Suggs, last November, federal investigators left with two laptop computers, three iPhones and a manila folder labeled “Eric Adams.” Ms. Suggs has not been accused of wrongdoing.

    Days later, in a dramatic scene on a Greenwich Village street, F.B.I. agents told the mayor’s security detail to step aside, climbed into his S.U.V. with him and seized his electronic devices.

    Until federal investigations closed in on him, Mr. Adams’s life had seemed a classic New York success story.

    Raised by a working-class mother in Brooklyn and Queens, he overcame dyslexia and run-ins with the police, and then joined the Police Department himself. He worked initially as a transit officer, and sought to make changes from within. During a two-decade career there, he rose to the rank of captain and served as a vocal, and sometimes contentious, advocate for Black officers.

    Retiring to pursue a life in politics, Mr. Adams dreamed for years of becoming New York’s mayor, an ambition he realized by embracing diverse constituencies across the city, and an accomplishment he has said was divinely ordained.

    As mayor, Mr. Adams vowed to return “swagger” to a city still emerging from the pandemic, and he surrounded himself in City Hall with friends and associates whose loyalty to him sometimes exceeded their policy expertise. Several had troubled pasts.

    But his 33-month tenure as mayor has been marred by scandal. In July 2023, the Manhattan district attorney, Alvin L. Bragg, charged six people, including a retired police inspector who had worked and socialized with Mr. Adams, with conspiring to funnel illegal donations to the mayoral campaign.

    Two months later, Mr. Bragg charged Eric Ulrich, the mayor’s former senior adviser and buildings commissioner, with conspiracy and taking bribes. Mr. Bragg accused Mr. Ulrich of using his city-funded position to “line his pockets.”

    More recently, federal agents seized the phones of some of the highest-ranking officials in city government, including the police commissioner, the schools chancellor, the first deputy mayor, the deputy mayor for public safety, and a senior adviser who has been sued four times this year for sexual harassment. None of those officials has been charged with a crime.

    Although he will become the first sitting mayor to be criminally charged, Mr. Adams is hardly the first to face criminal investigation. Jimmy Walker, a flamboyant, nightlife-loving mayor known as Beau James, held court in Jazz Age New York City but resigned amid a corruption scandal and fled to Europe.

    Mayor William O’Dwyer, the only modern mayor aside from Mr. Adams to have served as a police officer, resigned months into his second term amid what was described in his obituary as “the biggest police scandal in the city’s history.”

    More recently, federal prosecutors investigated Bill de Blasio, Mr. Adams’s predecessor, over his interactions with donors, but brought no charges. And Rudolph W. Giuliani was indicted this year, more than two decades after he was mayor, in a Georgia case focused on efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

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