New York City Mayor Eric Adams asks court to toss case against him due to prosecutorial misconduct
Posted/updated on: February 26, 2025 at 8:39 am
(NEW YORK) -- The corruption case against New York Mayor Eric Adams should be dropped because of âan extraordinary flurryâ of leaks by prosecutors, his attorney said in a new court filing Wednesday.
The attorney, Alex Spiro, accused âsomeone within the governmentâ of leaking a letter written by then-acting U.S. Attorney Danielle Sassoon, who resigned in protest of an order to dismiss the bribery and campaign finance charges.
The letter, dated Feb. 12, said the Justice Department agreed to dismiss criminal charges as part of a quid pro quo to secure the mayorâs help with President Trumpâs crackdown on illegal immigration.
âThe disclosure of this letter to the press was part of an extraordinary flurry of leaked internal Justice Department correspondence that included memoranda from the Acting Deputy Attorney General to the Southern District and an unhinged resignation letter by one of the former line prosecutors on this case,â Spiro said.
The line prosecutor Spiro references is Hagan Scotten, whose resignation letter said only a âfoolâ or âcowardâ would carry out the order to drop the mayorâs case.
âIn addition to violating Mayor Adamsâs fundamental constitutional rights and ability to receive a fair trial, the governmentâs leaks violated numerous statutory and court rules, including the Justice Departmentâs own longstanding policies aimed at curbing prosecutorial misconduct,â Spiro said. âSimply put, the governmentâs conduct has destroyed whatever presumption of innocence Mayor Adams had left.â
The judge, Dale Ho, declined to immediately grant the Trump administrationâs motion to dismiss the case and appointed Paul Clement, a former U.S. solicitor general, to examine the governmentâs motives.
In the new motion filed first thing Wednesday morning, Adams asked the court to toss the case for a new reason -- prosecutorial misconduct.
âThe Court should act swiftly and dismiss this case with prejudice to prevent further irrevocable harm to Mayor Adams,â the motion said.
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