Breaking: A federal judge declined to dismiss corruption charges against New York Mayor Eric Adams, instead ordering a probe of the law governing the Trump Justice Department’s
Baltimore’s mayor discusses DEI and the city’s lawsuit against the Trump administration Eric Adams is one step closer to having the federal charges against him dropped Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott takes attacks on diversity,
Border czar Tom Homan met with New York City Mayor Eric Adams on Thursday in a sign of how the Trump administration has its eyes on the country’s biggest city to carry out its immigration enforcement plans.
Ho, a second-year federal judge in Manhattan, to decide if Adams’ corruption case goes away. It’s the biggest challenge of Ho’s young judicial career, pitting the political pursuits of new Justice Department leadership in Washington against the objections of federal prosecutors in Manhattan who charged Adams last September and insist he be held accountable for allegedly taking bribes and illegal campaign contributions from foreign interests.
New York City council member Robert Holden joins ‘America Reports’ to discuss the growing calls for Mayor Eric Adams to resign.
The resignations came after the mayor agreed to give ICE access to New York's Rikers Island jail and the Justice Department moved to dismiss criminal charges against him.
The Justice Department ordered federal prosecutors to drop corruption charges against Adams, notably after the New York City mayor curried favor with Trump.
A Democratic lawmaker slammed the DOJ for pursuing what they described as a "deeply corrupt bargain" with the New York City mayor.
After a tumultuous two weeks and general silence from the mayor on the chaos, Eric Adams faced reporters on Monday and largely deflected an onslaught of questions about his ongoing legal and political troubles.
Democrat Rep. Ritchie Torres said he is backing Andrew Cuomo for New York City mayor, parting with incumbent Eric Adams before June's primary.
Trump DOJ lawyer Emil Bove wrote that bribery charges against New York City's mayor should be dismissed "without prejudice," meaning they could come back.