close
close

Ourladyoftheassumptionparish

Part – Newstatenabenn

Mayor Eric Adams to have court date in April 2025 as lawyers fight bribery charge
patheur

Mayor Eric Adams to have court date in April 2025 as lawyers fight bribery charge

New York City Mayor Eric Adams returned to court on Friday, sitting stoically as his lawyers fought to remove a key charge in the case. federal corruption indictment that threatens his political future.

The Democrat is fighting to dismiss a bribery charge, one of five counts in a case that U.S. District Judge Dale E. Ho said will go to trial on April 21, 2025, in the midst of Adams’ promised re-election campaign.

The mayor’s lawyers argued at a hearing in federal court in Manhattan that the bribery charge does not meet the federal crime standard and is “insufficiently specific,” particularly after recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions redefined how processes.

“The U.S. attorney had trouble defining what the ‘quo’ is here,” Adams’ attorney John Bash argued, referring to the concept of “quid pro quo,” a Latin phrase that essentially means “something for something.”

Prosecutors responded that Adams’ lawyers were splitting because, they allege, Adams was taking bribes and exert influence while holding a previous elected office and while anticipating becoming mayor.

Ho said he would take the arguments “under consideration and try to make a ruling shortly.”

Prosecutors also revealed Friday that they searched nearly two dozen electronic devices seized in the investigation, but they still couldn’t access Adams’ personal cellphone and weren’t sure they would. According to his indictment, Adams changed his password just before turning the phone over to authorities and later claimed he forgot it.

the accusationwhich also includes charges of wire fraud and conspiracy, accuses Adams of accepting flight upgrades and other luxury travel benefits valued at $100,000 along with illegal campaign contributions from a Turkish official and other foreign nationals seeking to buy his influence.

In exchange, prosecutors say, Adams performed political favors that benefited the Turkish government, including pressuring the fire department in 2021 to approve the opening of a diplomatic tower he had deemed unsafe.

Adams held a different elected office at the time, Brooklyn Borough President, but by then it was clear he would become mayor.

Adams has pleaded not guilty to the charges and vowed to remain in office while preparing his legal defense.

Bash argued that the alleged benefits do not meet the legal definition of bribery because they predate his tenure as mayor and “have nothing to do with his governmental position.”

Adams’ lawyers maintain that prosecutors seek to criminalize “normal and perfectly legal acts” that Adams carried out as Brooklyn borough president before being elected mayor.

Under the law, prosecutors must prove that Adams accepted bribes in exchange for using his official position to exert influence. Assistant U.S. Attorney Hagan Scotten argued that Adams’ role as district president “brings him into the room, so to speak, with the fire commissioner.”

Ho wondered if, rather than Adams’ job as borough president, it was his impending move to City Hall that gave him the power to pressure the fire department.

“It seems a little strange when the jurisdictional connection here is that he was Brooklyn borough president but that his ability to lobby extends from something else,” Ho said.

Scotten stood his ground, arguing that “if Margot Robbie called him and was really persuasive,” the “Barbie” actor and producer still couldn’t influence the fire department without also holding elected office.

“I probably would have taken that call,” Ho joked, drawing laughter from the courtroom.

Ho assigned the defense and prosecution every 20 minutes to discuss the issue.

The judge interjected with questions throughout the arguments, at one point asking Bash to consider whether prosecutors could remedy their alleged shortcomings by providing additional details or allegations.

“I would hate to write the government’s superseding indictment for them, if that’s the direction they’re going to go,” Bash responded before launching into a lengthy discussion of the intricacies of bribery law.

Adams broke his solemn stare and nodded emphatically near the end of the two-hour hearing as another of his attorneys, Alex Spiro, warned the judge that holding his trial at the same time as next June’s Democratic primary would be a “serious, serious” act. democratic concern.”

Ho said he’s confident the April 2025 date will hold, “assuming nothing unexpected comes up.”

Scotten said at a hearing last month that they are conducting “several related investigations” and that it is “very likely” that prosecutors will seek a superseding indictment charging Adams with additional crimes. Scotten also said it is “likely” more defendants will be charged.

On Thursday night, Ho rejected another defense attempt to undermine the case, denying Adams’ request for a hearing into the mayor’s claims that the government has been leaking information about the investigation to the media.

The judge ruled that Adams and his attorneys did not substantiate those claims and, if any leaks occurred, that the government was to blame.

In court papers outlining their arguments, Adams’ attorneys said the years of flight upgrades and other benefits the mayor received were, at best, “classic perks,” which recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings found were not covered by the bribery statute if they were granted for past acts, according to the file.

Meanwhile, federal prosecutors responded that Adams’ actions were clearly criminal.

“It should be clear from the indictment that there is nothing routine about a public official accepting more than $100,000 in benefits from a foreign diplomat, which he went to great lengths to conceal, including fabricating false document trails to create the illusion of payment.” , prosecutors wrote.

Several of Adams’s closest aides, including his police commissioner, the schools chancellor and several vice mayors, resigned in recent months after federal investigators executed coordinated searches of their homes in early September.

Adams has maintained that he can continue to lead the city effectively while fighting the charges.

But his political future remains complicated and several opponents have announced plans to challenge him in next year’s mayoral primary.

Earlier this week, Adams raised eyebrows after repeatedly refusing to criticize former President Donald Trump, refusing to say when he last spoke to the Republican nominee or whether he was seeking a pardon should Trump win re-election.