Fallout from Eric Adams case continues at the Justice Department

The U.S. Justice Department sought Friday to dismiss a political corruption case against New York City Mayor Eric Adams even as the turmoil inside the department intensified after several top prosecutors resigned rather than obey orders to dismiss the case.

At least seven prosecutors have resigned in New York and Washington. The list includes Danielle Sassoon, the acting U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, who said she was baffled by the idea of walking away from such a strong case when her office had been planning to add new charges against Adams. Five lawyers tied to the public integrity unit in Washington, D.C., also resigned rather than carry out an order to abandon the Adams case.

This was followed by a resignation letter that sent shockwaves through the legal community: Prosecutor Hagan Scotten, who earned two Bronze medals for his military service and who clerked for Chief Justice John Roberts, wrote he does not have negative views about the Trump administration. But he said any prosecutor knows the laws and tradition would not allow using the enormous power of the Justice Department to lean on elected officials.

“I expect you will eventually find someone who is enough of a fool or enough of a coward to file your motion,” Scotten wrote in his letter. “But it was never going to be me.”

Former Justice officials stunned

Former Justice Department veterans, including Republicans, are aghast at the developments.

They are furious with Emil Bove, the No. 2 at the department who used to be Trump’s defense attorney, for being heavy handed with the prosecutors in New York and Washington. One former official said the scandal was worse than Watergate.

Another former official asked: “What kinds of political appointees would go work for this Justice Department now?”

The man at the heart of the fallout

Adams, the man at the center of the fallout, was indicted last year on corruption charges, with a trial scheduled for April. He was charged with conspiracy, bribery, wire fraud and soliciting contributions from foreign nationals. He’s pleaded not guilty.

Adams’ lawyer has flatly rejected the idea the mayor has a deal with the Justice Department where Adams would go along with tough immigration tactics and the Justice Department would drop the case against him for now.

But since the election, Adams has worked to cozy up to President Trump and on Friday he pledged to cooperate with the Trump administration’s tough immigration enforcement strategy. Adams appeared on Fox and Friends Friday morning with Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, who appeared to talk about an agreement, which the prosecutors in New York flagged as an enormous legal and ethical problem.

“If he doesn’t come through, I’ll be back in New York city, and we won’t be sitting on the couch, ‘I’ll be in his office, up his butt, saying, ‘Where the hell is the agreement we came to?'” Homan said.

Adams responded: “We’re going to deliver for the safety of the people of this city.”

Ultimately it’s not up to the Department of Justice to dismiss the case against Adams. That’s something Judge Dale Ho will have to do. The judge may want to hold a hearing first where he could put some of these Justice Department officials on the spot about what kind of deal they may have had with Adams.

 

Scientists have figured out why flamingos are such weird eaters

Flamingos look silly when they eat, but new research suggests they're actually being smart.

Two officials fired by Trump return to court to challenge his power

Cathy Harris and Gwynne Wilcox, Democratic board members of independent agencies, argue President Trump lacked the authority to fire them, citing federal law and Supreme Court precedent.

Trump denounces ‘activist’ judges. He’s not the first president to do so

Criticism of "activist" judges predates the term and has come from both ends of the political spectrum. Democratic and Republican presidents alike have accused the courts of exceeding their constitutional role.

‘Murderbot’ is the best new comedy of 2025. You read that right

The Apple TV+ show takes what might be the oldest sci-fi premise there is — what does it mean to be human? — and mines it for comedy gold.

Historical precedent: Courts wrestle with White House’s ‘invasion’ claim

Federal judges are looking back to the 18th century to define what constitutes an invasion, weighing a key legal argument for the Trump administration's use of a wartime deportation authority.

Why UnitedHealth’s terrible year is dragging down the Dow

The health care giant's shares are down more than 50% in the last month. That's hurting the powerful U.S. stock-market index.

More Front Page Coverage