NEW YORK ā New York City Mayor Eric Adams has never been shy about his globetrotting ways. But heās not always said how he bankrolled years' worth of overseas adventures.
Federal prosecutors unsealed an indictment Thursday saying the Democrat took trips to France, China, Sri Lanka, India, Hungary, Ghana and Turkey that were partly or fully paid for by people looking to buy his influence in city government.
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The gifts, prosecutors said, included free hotel rooms, seat upgrades worth thousands of dollars, expensive meals, entertainment ā even a trip to a Turkish bath. All told, the perks were worth more than $100,000, prosecutors said.
The indictment also accuses Adams of conspiring to collect illegal donations to his campaigns, partly by funneling them through straw donors who hadnāt actually contributed the money.
Adams says he didnāt do anything wrong and has no plans to resign. His lawyer, Alex Spiro, criticized the charges as a jumble of innuendo meant to mislead the public and tarnish the mayor.
Here are highlights from the 57-page indictment:
Key allegations against Adams
Adams is accused of exploiting a yearslong relationship with people tied to Turkey, who funded his travel and fueled his run for mayor with donations that helped him qualify for more than $10 million in public campaign funds. People who are not U.S. citizens are banned by law from donating to U.S. political candidates.
Prosecutors say Adams returned the favor in September 2021 by ensuring that Turkey's newly built diplomatic tower in Manhattan wouldn't be subject to a fire inspection, which it was certain to fail.
At one point, a Turkish official praised Adams as a ātrue friend of Turkey,ā according to the indictment. Adams allegedly responded: āYes even more a true friend of yours. You are my brother. I am hear (sic) to help."
The indictment said Adams also agreed not to release a statement on Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day that would reflect poorly on Turkey.
Adams is charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, bribery and receiving campaign contributions from a foreign national.
Who is named in the indictment?
Adams is the only person charged and the only person identified by name ā but there are lots of other characters who factor prominently in the indictment.
There's the āTurkish Official,ā a senior official in the Turkish diplomatic establishment said to have arranged Adams' travel perks and facilitated straw donations to his campaign; āThe Promoter,ā a Turkish entrepreneur who prosecutors say organized events to introduce Adams to Turkish businesspeople; and the āAirline Manager,ā a New York City-based general manager for Turkish Airlines who booked Adams' free and heavily discounted flights and business class upgrades.
There were also āBusinessman-1,ā the owner of a Turkish University who prosecutors say was considering a business venture in Brooklyn; the āBusinesswoman,ā who gave Adams free or steeply discounted stays in opulent suites at the St. Regis Istanbul, a luxury hotel she owned; plus āBusinessman-2,ā āBusinessman-3,ā āBusinessman-4,ā and āBusinessman-5,ā all of whom were accused of being involved in straw donations.
āThe Promoterā
Prosecutors said the person they identified as āThe Promoterā concocted a plan ā personally approved by Adams ā to funnel up to $100,000 in banned campaign contributions to him through U.S. employees of a Turkish university, the indictment alleges.
At one point, an Adams staffer tried to discourage the idea, saying Adams likely wouldnāt be interested in āsuch gamesā because it āmight cause a big stink later on," according to the indictment. But prosecutors said Adams liked the idea and directed his staffer to pursue it.
āThe Promoterā purportedly told associates that Adams was worth supporting because he could become president someday.
'This is how things work in this country'
At one point, the indictment says, a construction company owner tried to recruit others in industry and the Turkish community to back Adams with campaign contributions and gifts, writing, in part, this āmay feel like swimming against the current but unfortunately this is how things work in this country.ā
What does Adamsā lawyer say?
Spiro told reports the conduct described in the indictment wasnāt illegal or didnāt involve the mayor.
The Turkish consulate was asking for āa courtesy,ā not payback, when it wanted Adamsā help in skipping a fire inspection, Spiro said, adding: āNew Yorkers do this all the time.ā Adams said heād see what he could do and, a few days later, ignored a follow up phone call from the consulate, Spiro asserted.
āThere is no corruption. This is not a real case,ā Spiro said.
Spiro said Adams sent emails telling his staff never to accept foreign donations.
As for the free flights and upgrades, Spiro said thereās nothing illegal or unusual about that.
āWhen you actually look at this -- if you just take a second to step back and look at this -- look at the flights they talk about, the travel, the expenses,ā Spiro said. āThe flight they talk about, that free flight was in 2017 -- seven years ago, five years before heās the mayor. Thereās nothing illegal or improper about that.ā
Adamsā flight upgrades put him in otherwise open seats, the defense attorney said, contending that such arrangements are a common practice in the airline industry.
āThatās what airlines do,ā Spiro said. āThey do it every day. They do it for VIPs. They do it for congresspeople. Theyāre empty seats that cost the airlines nothing.ā
Alleged cover up
The indictment claims that Adams and co-conspirators took steps to cover their tracks, including making a false paper trail to make it appear as if he had fully paid for flights that were free or deeply discounted.
The indictment also accused the mayor and others of making it difficult for investigators.
FBI agents seized electronic devices from Adams last November as he left an event. According to the indictment, the mayor produced two phones but not the personal phone. Adams later turned over that phone in response to a subpoena, but it was locked and required a password.
Adams claimed to have forgotten it, the indictment said.
According to the indictment, an Adams staffer who met with FBI agents excused herself at one point, went to a bathroom and deleted the encrypted messaging app she had used to communicate with the mayor, the Turkish official, the Turkish airline contact and others.