New York City Mayor Eric Adams has a catchphrase of sorts he likes to bandy about when describing his path to Gracie Mansion: “Dyslexic, arrested, rejected—now I’m elected!” As of Thursday morning, the former police captain turned leader of America’s largest city can add another word to his jingle: “Indicted.”
The announcement of federal charges against Adams is not a truly stunning turn of events, not when the storm clouds have been gathering over his administration for months. But it can at least fall under the category of “deeply ironic.” Adams was once heralded as a new face of the moderate wing of the Democratic Party, an answer to the leftward tilt that some commentators thought was damaging the party’s brand with swing voters. As an ex-cop, Adams channeled a deluge of funding to his former colleagues at the New York Police Department in the name of fighting crime — but it turns out he was allegedly lining his own pockets without any sign of cognitive dissonance.
The announcement of federal charges against Adams is not a truly stunning turn of events, not when the storm clouds have been gathering over his administration for months
Even before the charges were unsealed, Adams issued a defiant statement denying any wrongdoing. “I always knew that if I stood my ground for [New Yorkers] that I would be a target — and a target I became,” he declared, doing his best impression of former President Donald Trump. After all, how could he be guilty if his only crime was caring too much for the well being of the city?
But that was far from the allegations in the indictment against Adams that the Justice Department unsealed on Thursday morning. He is charged with four crimes: conspiracy to commit wire fraud, federal program bribery, and to receive campaign contributions by foreign nationals; wire fraud; bribery; and two counts of solicitation of a contribution by a foreign national. The allegations extend back over a decade to when he was Brooklyn’s borough president all the way through to his mayoralty.
The allegation that Adams took bribes in exchange for political favors to Turkish officials is particularly galling when Adams has centered his political brand around the need to provide “justice and safety” to beleaguered Gothamites. Once in office, he made crime the focal point of his administration, falsely declaring a few months into the job in 2022 that he had “never witnessed crime at this level” in the city. (Major crimes were nowhere near the peak seen in the 1990s, neither nationally nor in New York City.)








