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Judge in Eric Adams Case Names Lawyer to Argue Against Dropping of Charges

Judge Dale E. Ho said that with Eric Adams’s lawyer and federal prosecutors agreeing to end the case, he needed to hear independent arguments.

​Judge Dale E. Ho said that with Eric Adams’s lawyer and federal prosecutors agreeing to end the case, he needed to hear independent arguments.   

Judge Dale E. Ho said that with Eric Adams’s lawyer and federal prosecutors agreeing to end the case, he needed to hear independent arguments.

A federal judge on Friday delayed a ruling on the Justice Department’s request to drop the corruption case against Mayor Eric Adams of New York City, instead appointing an outside lawyer to present independent arguments on the motion, which was otherwise unopposed.

The lawyer, Paul D. Clement, is a political conservative who was the U.S. solicitor general during President George W. Bush’s administration.

The judge, Dale E. Ho of Federal District Court in Manhattan, also called for additional briefs from the parties and said he would hold an oral argument on March 14 if he felt it was necessary.

Judge Ho’s decision, explained in a five-page ruling, will prolong an episode that has led to political and legal upheaval, with federal prosecutors in New York and Washington resigning and several of Mr. Adams’s campaign opponents calling for him to step down.

Read Judge Ho’s Order in the Eric Adams Corruption Case

Judge Dale E. Ho appointed a lawyer to present independent arguments on the federal government’s motion to drop the charges against New York City’s mayor.

Read Document

The events have increased pressure on Gov. Kathy Hochul of New York, who said on Thursday that she would seek to impose strict new guardrails on the mayor’s administration rather than force him out of office.

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