3 top U.S. prosecutors resign over order to drop NYC Mayor Eric Adams corruption case
Three senior federal prosecutors resigned Thursday in connection with the department’s decision to drop the criminal corruption case against New York City Mayor Eric Adams.
Danielle Sassoon, the acting U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, resigned, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office said. Her decision came three days after Justice Department leadership instructed her to drop the criminal corruption case against Adams.
Sassoon, a veteran prosecutor who helped lead the prosecution and conviction of Sam Bankman-Fried, was appointed interim U.S. attorney by the Trump administration last month.
Emil Bove, the acting No. 2 official at the Justice Department, accepted Sassoon’s resignation, and placed three assistant U.S. attorneys who worked the case on leave pending investigations of their conduct by the Office of the Attorney General and the department’s Office of Professional Responsibility, according to a letter from Bove obtained by NPR.
“You lost sight of the oath that you took when you started at the Department of Justice by suggesting that you retain a discretion to interpret the Constitution in a manner inconsistent with the policies of a democratically elected President and a Senate-confirmed Attorney General,” Bove wrote in the letter.
One of the three assistant U.S. attorneys placed on leave is Hagan Scotten, a Bronze star winner and a graduate of Harvard Law School, who previously clerked for Chief Justice John Roberts.
Later Thursday, John Keller, the acting head of the Justice Department’s Public Integrity Section, and Kevin Driscoll, the senior-most career Justice Department official leading the Criminal Division, also resigned after being asked to take over the Adams case, according to two sources who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record.
Adams was indicted last year on corruption charges, with a trial scheduled for April.
A Justice Department memo made public Monday called for federal charges against him to be shelved “without prejudice.” Adams has long said he’s innocent of any criminal wrongdoing.
In court filings, his attorneys accused U.S. attorneys of mishandling the case, in part by leaking sensitive and privileged information to the media. The indictment filed last September in federal court in Manhattan alleged Adams used his official positions with New York City to leverage “illegal campaign contributions and luxury travel.”
A former senior Justice Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity in order to speak freely, called the fallout from the Adams case, “the worst we’ve seen so far (from the new DOJ) and that’s a high bar.” The former official said the idea of dropping the Adams case in this way was “jaw dropping, shocking.”
Claudette Colvin, who refused to move seats on a bus at start of civil rights movement, dies
Civil rights pioneer Claudette Colvin has died. She was 86. Her 1955 arrest for refusing to give up her seat on a segregated Montgomery bus helped spark the modern civil rights movement.
Claudette Colvin, who refused to move seats on a bus at start of civil rights movement, dies at 86
Colvin, at age 15, was arrested nine months before Rosa Parks gained international fame for also refusing to give up her seat on a segregated bus.
Republicans say Clintons risk contempt of Congress for not testifying on Epstein
House Republicans are seeking testimony as part of their investigation into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The Clintons say they've already provided in writing what little they know.
FTC accuses AI search engine of ‘rampant consumer deception’
Federal officials say a company that operates hundreds of landing pages for AI answers is running an operation that has duped thousands of users, who were unable to stop costly monthly charges.
How Minnesota faith communities are resisting aggressive immigration operations
As immigration enforcement actions have ramped up in Minnesota, people of faith have been at the forefront of the response to ICE detentions and the killing of Renee Macklin Good by a federal agent.
‘My role was making movies that mattered,’ says Jodie Foster, as ‘Taxi Driver’ turns 50
Foster was just 12 years old when she starred in the 1976 film. "What luck to have been part of that, our golden age of cinema in the '70s," she says. Her latest film is Vie Privée (A Private Life).
