NYC Mayor Eric Adams seeks sanctions on federal prosecutors who charged him

KFSN logo
Tuesday, October 1, 2024 3:47PM
Mayor Eric Adams seeks sanctions on federal prosecutors who charged him
Phil Taitt has the latest on the ongoing investigation and indictment of Mayor Eric Adams.

NEW YORK -- Lawyers for New York City Mayor Eric Adams have filed court papers calling for sanctions against federal prosecutors.

They argued in a new court filing Tuesday that prosecutors demonstrated "appalling disregard" for Adams' rights.

The mayor's lawyers accused prosecutors of leaking grand jury material and other sensitive information in "brazen violations" of the rules.

Defense attorney Alex Spiro asked for an evidentiary hearing and sanctions.

RELATED: NYC Mayor Eric Adams federal corruption investigation: Timeline of events leading up to indictment

Adams is due in court Wednesday for an initial hearing with the trial judge. He has already sought to dismiss the bribery charge, arguing his alleged conduct does not meet the legal definition of bribery.

Adams has pleaded not guilty to a five count indictment accusing him of engaging in a years long conspiracy to take illegal foreign money.

It comes the morning after one of Adams' closest aides resigned late Monday, just days after the New York City mayor was indicted on corruption charges.

ALSO SEE: NYC Mayor Eric Adams charged with fraud, accepting $10 million in improper campaign contributions

Timothy Pearson is the fifth senior member of the administration to announce his departure in the past three weeks.

Pearson, a former high-ranking official in the police department, served as a senior advisor on public safety to the mayor.

He's been named in multiple lawsuits as he's currently under investigation by another city agency for his role in a brawl at a shelter for homeless migrants.

The FBI had seized his phone a month ago and served him a subpoena.

Pearson adds to a list of resignations from Adams camp, including former police commissioner Edward Caban, schools chancellor David Banks, chief legal advisor Lisa Zornberg, and health commissioner Ashwin Vasan.