He sought, allegedly, and accepted illegal campaign contributions through these nominal donors who falsely certified that they were the ones giving Mayor Eric Adams campaign contributions when really they were wealthy business people and foreign nationals who were giving those money to the nominal individuals, so they were the ones behind the contributions.
Mayor Eric Adams also Is alleged to have taken bribes from foreign nationals, namely people from Turkey, as much as possibly $123,000 in free travel benefits.
If true, it's not only illegal, but it is a very bad look for him.
You know, there are two main aspects of this.
That I think are the most damning that I want to alert you to.
The first is that not only does it appear that the mayor got undue campaign contributions in terms of these nominal contributors, but also the indictment alleges that he used these to compound gains and defraud the state of New York.
Now, apparently, in New York City, there is something called a matching funds program.
Reading here from the indictment, the program matches small-dollar contributors from individual city residents with up to eight times their amount in public funds in order to give New Yorkers a greater voice in elections.
And apparently, Mayor Adams used campaign contributions to apply to this matching funds program using these straw donations.
And he, reading from the indictment, fraudulently obtained as much as $2,000 in public funds for each illegal contribution using that matching program.
Going on, Adams falsely certified compliance with applicable campaign finance regulations and relied on the concealed nature of these illegal contributions to falsely portray his campaigns as law abiding.
And so as a result of this alleged fraudulence of the matching program, Adams' 2021 mayoral campaign received more than $10 million in public funds.
Wow.
So that's in addition to the funds that were allegedly illegally contributed through these straw donors.
He also got $10 million, it is alleged, in public funds.
That's one of the biggest parts of this indictment because he...
Affirmed, as I just noted to you, that he was complying with the applicable campaign finance regulations in order to qualify for that matching program.
But another thing here is that it appears that Mayor Adams was going along with a scheme to conceal bribes that he got from foreign nationals.
Of course, there's this whole concept in the law.
That you need to know that you're committing a crime in order to be responsible for that crime.
It's called mens rea or guilty mind.
If you, for instance, are driving and you're picking your child up from school and you are distracted, you're listening to the Dennis Prager radio show and you're not paying attention and some child gets back.
gets in the back of your car and you drive two or three blocks and you look in the rearview mirror and you realize, oh my gosh, that's not my child.
You're not going to be guilty for kidnapping because you didn't realize that you had taken a child that's not yours.
You have to know that you are committing a crime.
But it appears that Mayor Adams knew that he was committing a crime.
I mean, of course, when you're the mayor of New York City and you're taking But he did know this, according to the indictment, because before he was mayor in 2015, he reported a trip that was arranged and paid for by the Turkish government.