FBI searches NYC Mayor Eric Adams’ home Gracie Mansion, after he is indicted in federal case

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NYC Mayor Eric Adams indicted on federal charges in campaign finance case

FBI agents on Thursday morning searched the Gracie Mansion home of New York City Mayor Eric Adams after he was indicted on multiple criminal charges in federal court in Manhattan.

The lengthy indictment, which remains sealed for now, accuses Adams of criminal conduct related to contributions to the Democrat’s 2021 mayoral campaign, and other conduct going back as far as 2015, when he was Brooklyn borough president, according to a source familiar with the case.

Much of the indictment centers on the Turkish community and Turkish businessmen who allegedly exerted influence on Adams, and the criminal counts alleged include conspiracy to commit bribery, bribery, wire fraud and contributions by a foreign national.

Mayor Eric Adams outside Gracie Mansion on July 8, 2024. (Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Daily News/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Luiz C. Ribeiro | New York Daily News | TGetty Images

A source said that the indictment mentions up to $20 million in donations that Adams’ campaign received as a result of a matching fund program that the city’s Campaign Finance Program offers candidates for small-dollar donations made to them by residents of New York City. That program gives candidates funds up to eight times the amount of a small-dollar donation from an individual.

The source, who was granted anonymity in order to speak about a still-sealed criminal case, said the indictment alleges that Adams, 64, traveled to Turkey to receive illegal contributions.

The former police captain is at least the second New York mayor to be criminally charged while still in office.

And he is the first official in his administration to be charged as a result of multiple pending investigations that have ensnared the New York Police Department and the city’s top schools’ official.

Adams’ lawyer Alex Spiro, in a statement Thursday morning, said,  “Federal agents appeared this morning at Gracie Mansion in an effort to create a spectacle (again) and take Mayor Adams phone (again).”

“He has not been arrested and looks forward to his day in court,” Spiro said. “They send a dozen agents to pick up a phone when we would have happily turned it in.”

Federal agents search Gracie Mansion, the official residence of the mayor of New York City, on September 26, 2024, after Mayor Eric Adams was indicted on federal criminal charges. 

Timothy A. Clary | Afp | Getty Images

It was previously known the Manhattan U.S. attorney’s office was investigating Adams for potentially conspiring with the government of Turkey to funnel illegal donations into that campaign.

The New York Times on Monday reported that prosecutors had submitted grand jury subpoenas to City Hall, Adams and his campaign in July demanding information related to five other countries: Israel, China, Qatar, South Korea and Uzbekistan.

Adams gave a defiant statement Wednesday night after news of the indictment broke.

“It is now my belief that the federal government intends to charge me with crimes,” Adams said in a video statement. “If so, these charges would be entirely false, based on lies.”

“But they would not be surprising. I always knew that If I stood my ground for all of you that I would be a target — and a target I became.

“If I am charged, I am innocent and I will fight this with every ounce of my strength and spirit,” said Adams, who after working in the Police Department served as a state senator and then Brooklyn borough president.

The U.S. attorney’s office and the FBI declined to comment on the indictment.

Earlier Wednesday, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., called on the mayor to resign, saying the “flood of resignations and vacancies” resulting from various federal probes of administration officials “are threatening government functions.”

“For the good of the city he should resign,” Ocasio-Cortez said.

After news of the indictment broke, a growing number of elected officials and other political figures in New York also called on Adams to step down, among them city Comptroller Brad Lander and state Sen. Zellnor Myrie, who are both running for mayor next year, and former Comptroller Scott Stringer, who is weighing a run for City Hall.

If Adams resigns before his first term in office ends, he will be succeeded by New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams as acting mayor.

Democratic NYC Mayoral candidate Eric Adams raises hands with Jumaane Williams, New York City Public Advocate, and NYC Comptroller candidate Brad Lander during a Get Out the Vote (GOTV) rallyin front of Brooklyn Borough Hall on October 22, 2021 in Downtown Brooklyn in New York City.

Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

There are multiple federal investigations into Adams and people affiliated with him and his administration.

On Tuesday, city schools Chancellor David Banks told Adams he expected to retire at the end of 2024.

Banks’ surprise announcement came weeks after federal authorities seized electronic devices belonging to him, his brother, Deputy Mayor Phil Banks, and his fiancee, Deputy Mayor Sheena Wright.

Another Banks brother, Terence, is being investigated by the Manhattan U.S. attorney’s office in connection with the allocation of city contacts worth millions of dollars to the companies who received them after hiring Terence Banks’ consulting firm.

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The same prosecutors’ office is probing whether James Caban, the twin brother of former New York Police Commissioner Edward Caban, exploited his ties to his brother and the NYPD to benefit his nightclub security business.

Edward Caban resigned as police commissioner on Sept. 12, a week after his own phone was seized by federal investigators.

Three days after Edward Caban resigned, Adam’s mayoral counsel and chief legal advisor, Lisa Zornberg, resigned, saying she had “concluded that I can no longer serve in my position.”

Last Friday, federal investigators executed search warrants at the homes of Thomas Donlon, the acting NYPD commissioner.

Donlon, who is a former top FBI counterterrorism official in New York, said this week that the investigators “took materials that came into my possession approximately 20 years ago and are unrelated to my work with the New York City Police Department.”

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