A federal judge dismissed Mayor Eric Adams’ corruption case Wednesday, eliminating the possibility that the Trump Department of Justice could reopen the case but also squarely taking aim at the istration’s rationale for killing the case.

In indictment on bribery and campaign finance fraud charges was interfering with his ability to assist the Trump istration’s immigration enforcement initiative.

“Everything here smacks of a bargain: dismissal of the indictment in exchange for immigration policy concessions,” the judge asserted.

Ho said that dismissing the case without prejudice would have created “the unavoidable perception that the Mayor’s freedom depends on his ability to carry out the immigration enforcement priorities of the istration, and that he might be more beholden to the demands of the federal government than to the wishes of his own constituents.”

The dismissal comes just weeks before the June 24 mayor primary and a day before the mayor is required to file petition signatures his campaign is collecting to get on the ballot.

In a hastily arranged appearance outside Gracie Mansion, the mayor thanked his attorneys and waved around a copy of “Government Gangsters,” a book attacking the Biden Justice Department written by newly appointed FBI Director Kash Patel, a longtime Trump er.

“Today finally marks the end of this chapter,” he said. “The judge is making it clear that [the case] can never be brought back. As I have said all along, this case should have never been brought and I did nothing wrong.”

Last September, Manhattan federal prosecutors charged Adams with soliciting and accepting illegal campaign donations, including some from foreign sources tied to the Turkish government, that helped him generate $10 million in public matching funds during his 2021 election to City Hall. He also accepted more than $120,000 in travel perks arranged by the Turkish consulate, they alleged.

Adams denied wrongdoing and in February the newly arrived Trump Justice Department asked Ho to toss the case. But because they left the door open to reopen it down the road, a chorus of elected officials and good government types charged that the mayor was now a hostage to the istration. 

Four top deputies resigned in protest, and the mayor’s standing in the polls plummeted.

Ho took his time in ruling on the dismissal request, however, allowing third parties to file so-called “friend of the court” briefs arguing both for dismissing the case with prejudice and holding a hearing to explore the nature of the Justice Department’s decision. The department acknowledged that it had not examined the merits of the case, and the acting Manhattan U.S. attorney, Danielle Sassoon, refused to follow the order and resigned, asserting that the arrangement amounted to a quid pro quo deal.

The Justice Department’s motion to dismiss the case created an uproar that continues to resonate in the mayoral race.

The judge rejected an argument several third-party “friends of the court” had made urging him to deny DOJ’s motion, arguing that the department’s reasons for tossing the case were made in bad faith and against the public interest.

He made a point of stating that many of those arguments “have merit,” agreeing with their assertions that the DOJ’s decision to seek to dismiss the case without assessing the merits of the charges filed against the mayor raised serious questions about that action’s integrity.


In fact, a top mayoral aide, Mohammed Bahi, has already agreed to plead guilty to charges related to a criminal complaint alleging he orchestrated a straw donor scheme for the mayor, then informed the mayor directly that the FBI had ed some of the donors. Prosecutors allege Bahi told the donors the mayor had then expressed confidence they would not cooperate with law enforcement, prosecutors say.

And one of the mayor’s donors, Erden Arkan, a Turkish contractor, has also pleaded guilty to arranging for illegal “straw donations” to the mayor’s 2021 bid for City Hall. Prosecutors said those illegal contributions were part of a broader scheme to funnel money from foreign sources into Adams’ campaign, and last month revealed they were moving to bring obstruction of justice charges against the mayor.

Ho also zeroed in on the Trump istration’s claim that the mayor’s ability to cooperate with the istration’s efforts to deport undocumented individuals had been hamstrung by the time he had to focus on the indictment.

“Such an assertion is similarly unsubstantiated,” he wrote, noting that shortly after the DOJ filed the motion to dismiss, Adams announced he was planning to allow federal immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to operate on Rikers Island — “an act that appears to be contrary to New York City law.”

“The record does not show that this case has impaired Mayor Adams in his immigration enforcement efforts,” the judge wrote. “Instead it shows that after the DOJ decided to seek dismissal of his case, the Mayor took at least one new immigration related action consistent with the preferences of the new istration.”

He also rejected claims that the Manhattan U.S. attorney brought the case for political reasons. Acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove, who filed the actual motion, had cited a January op-ed by former Manhattan U.S. Attorney Damian Williams that criticized corruption in New York City and state government. 

“There is no evidence — zero — that they had any improper motives,” he wrote. “The record before the Court indicates that the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York prosecutors who worked on this case followed all appropriate Justice Department guidelines.”

He further took issue with the DOJ’s contention that the timing of filing of the charges — nine months before the primary — was somehow improperly interfering with the election. Ho asserted that the timing of the case “is entirely consistent with prior public corruption prosecutions.”

Within an hour of Ho’s decision going public, Adams’ attorney, Alex Spiro, who has from the start attacked the case as weak, stated, “The case against Eric Adams should have never been brought in the first place — and finally today that case is gone forever. From Day 1, the mayor has maintained his innocence and now justice for Eric Adams and New Yorkers has prevailed.”

Additional reporting by Katie Honan.

Greg is an award-winning investigative reporter at THE CITY with a special focus on corruption and the city's public housing system.