NEW YORK — A judge has no choice but to grant the Justice Department’s unusual and divisive request to dismiss New York City Mayor Eric Adams' corruption case, a court-appointed lawyer said Friday. But he recommended that prosecutors be barred from ever reviving the charges so they don’t hang over Adams ‘’like the proverbial Sword of Damocles.‘’
Paul Clement, who represented the federal government before the Supreme Court as President George W. Bush’s solicitor general, delivered the recommendation to Manhattan federal Judge Dale E. Ho in papers filed two weeks after Ho appointed him to provide neutral advice on the case.
In a written submission, Clement told Ho that there was ‘’ample reason'' to dismiss the prosecution without granting the Justice Department’s request to be able to refile them after this year’s mayoral election, which would leave ‘’a prospect that hangs like the proverbial Sword of Damocles over the accused.‘’
‘‘When it comes to the sensitive task of prosecuting public officials,‘’ Clement wrote, ‘’the prospect of re-indictment could create the appearance, if not the reality, that the actions of a public official are being driven by concerns about staying in the good graces of the federal executive, rather than the best interests of his constituents.‘’
Adams spokesperson Fabien Levy said on the social platform X: ‘’To quote @NYCMayor, ‘Yeah, duh.‘’’
Ho appointed Clement after Acting Deputy U.S. Attorney General Emil Bove defended the request at a hearing. Bove argued that the charges came too close to Adams' reelection campaign and would distract the mayor from assisting the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.
Bove had suggested the charges could be reinstated after the election if the new permanent U.S. attorney decided it was appropriate.
In a filing late Friday signed by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche and Bove, the government continued to maintain that the judge should allow reinstatement of the charges in the future.