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US prosecutors formally ask judge to drop case against NY mayor Eric Adams

New York City Mayor Eric Adams attends an M/WBE awards celebration at Gracie Mansion in New York
February 14, 2025
Luc Cohen, Jack Queen - Reuters

By Luc Cohen, Jack Queen

(Reuters) -Federal prosecutors on Friday formally asked a U.S. judge to drop bribery charges against New York Mayor Eric Adams after an order by an official in President Donald Trump's Justice Department for them to do so prompted mass resignations.

U.S. District Judge Dale Ho still must sign off on the request to dismiss the five-count criminal indictment brought last September charging Adams, a Democrat, with accepting travel perks from Turkish officials and political donations from foreigners in exchange for taking actions to benefit Turkey. Adams had pleaded not guilty. 

Federal prosecutors in Washington stepped in to make the filing on behalf of their New York counterparts on Friday. They said continuing the case would "interfere with the defendant's ability to govern in New York City, which poses unacceptable threats to public safety, national security and related federal immigration initiatives and policies."

The filing was signed by Antoinette Bacon, a supervisory official in the Justice Department's criminal division, and Edward Sullivan, senior litigation counsel in the public integrity section. Acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove separately signed the filing, saying he authorized the request.

In a memo sent to the Manhattan U.S. Attorney's office on February 10, Bove wrote that the order to drop the charges had nothing to do with the merits of the case, and that the Justice Department was not questioning the integrity of the prosecutors who brought it. 

Instead, Bove wrote that the indictment - brought by federal prosecutors during Democratic former President Joe Biden's term - interfered with Adams' 2025 mayoral re-election campaign, and that the case was distracting Adams from supporting Trump's immigration enforcement efforts. 

"The pending prosecution has unduly restricted Mayor Adams' ability to devote full attention and resources to ... illegal immigration and violent crime," Bove, Trump's former personal lawyer and a political appointee, wrote in the memo seen by Reuters.

The Republican president, who returned to office on January 20, has made curbing illegal immigration and stepping up deportations centerpieces of his second term in the White House. 

Danielle Sassoon, who the Trump administration picked last month to serve as Manhattan U.S. Attorney on a temporary basis, resigned on Thursday rather than comply with the order. Five other Justice Department officials also resigned.

"I am confident that Adams has committed the crimes with which he is charged," Sassoon wrote on Wednesday in a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi seen by Reuters. "I cannot agree to seek a dismissal driven by improper considerations."

Sassoon also said that her office was prepared to seek a new indictment accusing Adams of destroying evidence. Alex Spiro, a lawyer for Adams, said in an emailed statement, "This newest false claim is just the parting shot of a misguided prosecution exposed as a sham."

REVERSALS UNDER TRUMP

Since returning to office, Trump also has reversed some high-profile prosecutions carried out during Biden's presidency including pardoning people convicted of taking part in the January 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. In addition, the Adams case is not the first one involving a prominent political figure convicted of corruption to be undone under Trump. Democratic former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich was given a full pardon by Trump on Monday.

Adams, 64, has argued that he was unfairly targeted by Biden's administration because he criticized its immigration policy over a surge in migration to New York, the most populous U.S. city. 

In his memo, Bove wrote that the directive to dismiss the charges was not in exchange for the mayor's cooperation on federal immigration enforcement. But Bove appeared to endorse the assertion by Adams that he was prosecuted for political reasons. 

"It cannot be ignored that Mayor Adams criticized the prior administration's immigration policies before the charges were filed," Bove wrote. 

The directive amounted to an extraordinary intervention by Justice Department officials in a high-profile criminal matter brought by prosecutors in the Southern District of New York, an office that in the past has fiercely guarded its independence from political appointees in Washington. 

In his first three weeks back in the White House, Trump has overseen an overhaul of the Justice Department and the FBI that critics have said threatens the norm of insulating federal law enforcement from partisan politics. 

Adams, a former police captain, began his term in 2022 as a close ally of Biden. But that year, Adams began calling on Washington to boost funding to New York to deal with an influx in migrants. 

For months, Adams has sought to forge closer ties with Trump, fueling speculation that he might have been trying to secure a pardon. Adams attended Trump's inauguration in January.

Trump, who in 2023 pleaded not guilty to four sets of criminal indictments he said were politically motivated, has expressed sympathy for Adams' claim he was targeted by prosecutors for political reasons.

In December, before his inauguration, Trump said he would consider pardoning the mayor. 

In a court filing last month, prosecutors disputed Adams' assertion that he was targeted because of politics and said their investigation began more than a year before Adams started publicly criticizing the Biden administration.

Adams, seeking reelection, faces several challengers in the June Democratic primary in New York City mayor's race. 

(Reporting by Luc Cohen and Jack Queen; editing by Will Dunham)

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