Mayor Eric Adams said Wednesday he has hired a private defense attorney in the wake of an FBI raid on the home of his top fundraiser as he defended his response to the political crisis.
Adams made the remarks at City Hall during his first press conference since federal agents were seen carting off a box of documents last week from the Brooklyn brownstone owned by campaign honcho Brianna Suggs’ family.
The disclosure came as Adams mounted his first sustained public defense of his actions in the immediate aftermath of last week’s stunning raid, which took place as Hizzoner headed to Washington, DC, for a day of meetings about the migrant crisis at the White House and on Capitol Hill.
“Leadership is about presence,” the mayor said, defending his snap decision to head back to New York immediately upon hearing about the raid.
“I wanted to be here among not only my campaign team, but my City Hall team.”
Adams’ campaign said they mayor had hired Boyd Johnson, a former top federal prosecutor in Manhattan on as his defense attorney.
The front page of the New York Post the day after the federal raid on the Brooklyn home of his campaign’s top fundraiser, prompting the mayor to abandon his trip to Washington, DC, and return to New York. serincJohnson works at the same firm as a former top Adams aide, Brendan McGuire, who sources say has also been informally advising Adams too.
Additionally, McGuire’s white-shoe law firm represents the mayor’s political operation.
Adams’ decision on Thursday to cancel meetings where he was expected to press the Biden administration for more financial aid and other support alongside the mayors of both Chicago and Denver has been sharply criticized.
Two men, one in a windbreaker, the other in an FBI vest, outside the Brooklyn brownstone where Brianna Suggs, Mayor Adams’ top fundraiser, lives. NYPostHowever, the mayor snapped when asked if his quick decision to return home showed he was putting his political travails ahead of the city’s pressing issues.
“No. Next question,” he tartly responded.
The mayor has bludgeoned Biden for not providing enough financial aid and other assistance to help the Big Apple cope with the arrival of roughly 140,000 migrants over the last year and a half.
Adams blames the federal government for potentially forcing municipal budget cuts of 15 percent over the next year to cover the cost of providing housing and services for the recent arrivals, a tab that City Hall estimates will hit $12 billion over three years.
Mayor Eric Adams makes a public appearance at an unrelated event in Queens in November. J.C. RiceAdams blamed the budget crisis in part for his decision to ditch the annual Somos conference and confab organized by the state Legislature’s Puerto Rican/Hispanic Task Force in Puerto Rico, which is often a must-attend for Big Apple politicos.
“Me, using taxpayer dollars, right now, is not the best thing to do,” Adams said, describing the fiscal situation as “beyond our imagination.”
Adams has faced a number of legal and political scandals deep into the second year of his administration.
His first buildings commissioner, Eric Ulrich, resigned after Manhattan prosecutors put him under the microscope — and then indicted him — on allegations of trading access and favors for gifts and other bribes estimated to be worth $150,000.
The Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, amped up the pressure in July when he brought charges against six people, including a former police commander and a local construction firm, for organizing a straw donor scheme to channel cash to Adams’ 2021 mayoral bid.
Brianna Suggs is the 25-year-old political operative at the heart of the ballooning scandal. She’s described as the political “goddaughter” of Adams’ right hand at City Hall, chief adviser Ingrid Lewis-Martin.
Adams’ fundraising headaches then grew worse with the recent FBI raid, which was triggered by a separate probe into another possible straw donor scheme — this one allegedly involving a high-profile Brooklyn builder, KSK Construction, and cash from a foreign country, Turkey.
Suggs is not only Adams’ top fundraiser, she is close to the mayor’s right hand at City Hall, chief adviser Ingrid Lewis-Martin, and has been described by Brooklyn political sources as her “political goddaughter.”
As Adams’ woes have mounted, his administration has responded by clamping down on city reporters.
Weekly briefings about the migrant crisis have disappeared from the schedule, as have the regular briefings on public safety and other policing matters in the city.
The Crown Heights brownstone on Lincoln Place where Suggs lives that was raided by the feds. Paul MartinkaAdams now refuses to take questions on the news of the day following public events if not on the topic set by City Hall, except at a single weekly briefing.
City Hall staffers closed the security gate between the reporters’ desks at City Hall and his wing of the building at 11:02 a.m. to allow the mayor to walk from his offices into the historic Blue Room.
They then refused to admit the reporters who arrived as the gate was shut, claiming they were late for the 11 a.m. press conference and that the massive briefing space was too full.
City Hall often fails to meet that promptness standard in its own operations. For example, Hizzoner was some 40 minutes late for the previous week’s press conference.
Wednesday’s face-off with reporters was the among the shortest since Adams began his clampdown, at just 42 minutes.






