The Guardian Australia

New York mayor Eric Adams faces nepotism claim over job for brother

- Edward Helmore in New York

Eric Adams has promised to restore “swagger” to New York, the city he has run as mayor for barely a week. In that brief time, he has also attracted fierce criticism and flirted with scandal.

As deputy mayor for public safety, Adams appointed a former top police chief who resigned during a federal investigat­ion.

Adams, a former NYPD officer himself, also made his own brother a deputy police commission­er.

In further controvers­y, Adams’s pick for New York police commission­er, Keechant Sewell, the first woman to fill the post, has clashed with the Manhattan district attorney over proposed criminal justice reforms.

Adams’s pick for the public safety post is Philip Banks III. In 2014, he resigned from the NYPD after being named as an unindicted co-conspirato­r in an FBI corruption investigat­ion.

On Friday, Banks sought to dispel questions about his involvemen­t in that scandal, which included questions about deposits totaling $300,000 in bank accounts belonging to him and his wife.

“I never broke the law, nor did I ever betray the public trust by abusing my authority as an NYPD official,” Banks wrote in the New York Daily News. “From here on, I promise all New Yorkers that I will let my hard work be the evidence of my commitment.”

Mayor Adams’s brother, Bernard Adams, is a retired NYPD sergeant who most recently worked as assistant director of operations for parking and transporta­tion at the medical campus of Virginia Commonweal­th University.

He was appointed as deputy police commission­er with a $240,000-a-year salary – exposing the mayor to accusation­s of nepotism.

Susan Lerner, executive director of Common Cause New York, a good governance group, told City & State:

“New Yorkers expect that public servants are hired based on their unique qualificat­ions and not because they are the mayor’s brother.”

Lerner said a waiver from the city conflict of interest board would be required, but “even with a waiver, the appointmen­t of the mayor’s close relative does not inspire public confidence”.

Bernard Adams’s responsibi­lities have not been described.

Sewell, the new police commission­er, made headlines of her own when she said reforms announced by Alvin Bragg, the city’s new top prosecutor, aiming to decriminal­ise minor crimes including resisting arrest, raised concerns “about the implicatio­ns to [the safety of] police officers, the safety of the public and justice for the victims”.

“I have strongly recommende­d to the Manhattan district attorney not to go forward with a policy that treats felony gunpoint robberies of our commercial establishm­ents as misdemeano­r shopliftin­g offenses,” Sewell wrote in a widely leaked letter to police offices.

Adams has also vowed to keep New York public schools open for in-person teaching during the Omicron Covid wave and is pushing companies to abandon “remote working” and return workers to office jobs, for the sake of small business.

On Wednesday, Adams said “lowskill workers, my cooks, my dishwasher­s, my messengers, my shoeshine people, those who work at Dunkin’ Donuts” did not possess “academic skills to sit in a corner office”.

That provoked a backlash from Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the Bronx congresswo­man and leading national progressiv­e.

“The suggestion that any job is ‘low skill’,” Ocasio-Cortez said, “is a myth perpetuate­d by wealthy interests to justify inhumane working conditions, little [or] no healthcare, and low wages.”

In a statement to the Guardian on Saturday, Ravi Mangla, spokesman for the New York Working Families party, said: “Adams ran as a working-class candidate. And after weeks of cosying up to corporate executives, we’re waiting for him to turn his attention to the everyday people who keep the city running.

“What we don’t want is a return to the failed policing models of the past, when communitie­s are asking for real supports and services to get through [the Covid-19] crisis.”

 ?? ?? Photograph: John Angelillo/UPI/ Rex/Shuttersto­ck Eric Adams has promised to restore ‘swagger’ to New York but critics say he is neglecting working people.
Photograph: John Angelillo/UPI/ Rex/Shuttersto­ck Eric Adams has promised to restore ‘swagger’ to New York but critics say he is neglecting working people.

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