New York Daily News

Pressure on Eric accuser

Told she must file complaint soon with more details on sex assault claim

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

A woman accusing Mayor Adams of sexually assaulting her decades ago must file a formal complaint in court within 20 days outlining more details about her shocking claim, the Daily News has learned.

The woman, whose name is being withheld by The News, filed a so-called “notice of claim” in Manhattan Supreme Court in November saying she intended to sue the mayor for $5 million over allegation­s that he subjected her to “sexual assault, battery and employment discrimina­tion” while they both worked for the city Transit Police Department in 1993.

Since that brief filing, the woman and her attorney have declined to provide more details about her accusation­s. Adams, meantime, has vehemently denied the accusation­s, and his attorneys said as recently as a few weeks ago that he had yet to be served with her claim, a formality required to kick off any court proceeding.

However, on Tuesday afternoon, Sylvia Hinds-Radix, Adams’ corporatio­n counsel who leads the city Law Department, filed papers in Manhattan Supreme Court demanding that the woman provide “the complaint in this action” within 20 days.

The filing from Hinds-Radix indicates the initial claim has finally been served, as the Law Department otherwise wouldn’t be able to demand a full complaint.

Megan Goddard, the woman’s attorney, did not return a request for comment Tuesday, and neither did a spokesman for the mayor. A Law Department spokesman declined to comment.

In addition to Adams, the woman named the NYPD and the Guardians Associatio­n as defendants in her initial claim. The Guardians is a Black police officers’ fraternal organizati­on that the mayor used to head in the 1990s.

Adams (photo) confirmed in November that he expected the Law Department to represent him in any case brought by the complainan­t.

The woman filed her claim under the Adult Survivors Act, a state law that opened a one-year window in 2022 for victims of sexual misconduct to sue their assailants even if the statute of limitation­s on the claim had expired. Adams’ accuser filed her notice of claim on Nov. 22, 2023, one day before the one-year window closed.

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