New York Daily News

Adams asks to have his rat tix tossed by court

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Mayor Adams told an administra­tive court officer Thursday that she should throw out tickets he received for a rat infestatio­n at his Brooklyn home because he has spent thousands of dollars to address the problem.

Adams, who quipped last month that he was “looking forward to be the chocolate Perry Mason” while contesting the tickets, spent over 30 minutes on a call-in Office of Administra­tive Trials and Hearings proceeding, laying out evidence about why he believes his rodent violation summonses should be tossed out.

For starters, Adams shared receipts with the presiding OATH officer showing he has shelled out nearly $8,000 since last March on exterminat­ion services, traps and other gadgets to crack down on rats outside his three-story property on Lafayette Ave. in Bedford-Stuyvesant. The mayor rents out two of the floors in the building, and he said all his tenants have been helpful in keeping the front yard “extremely clean.”

“We all don’t like rats, and we all have been cooperatin­g together,” said the vermin-hating mayor, who has made street cleanlines­s and pest eradicatio­n a prominent focus of his administra­tion.

Still, the summonses issued on Dec. 7 — which were first reported by the Daily News and come with a combined possible max penalty of $1,200 — allege the vile critters existed in Adams’ front yard.

The Health Department inspector who wrote the tickets also reported a rodent “burrow” and “runway” in the yard, in addition to various “active rat signs,” like “fresh droppings.”

Adams, who was under oath during the hearing, disputed the inspector’s findings.

He said the burrow is on his neighbor’s side of the fence, and that he shouldn’t be penalized for it. He also submitted videos and photos to the presiding officer that he said showed there was no improperly disposed garbage or signs of rats on the property on the day in question.

“We have not witnessed any rodents at all around the property, and we keep the front extremely clean,” he said.

The presiding officer, Sam Chetrit, did not immediatel­y rule on Adams’ appeal, but said she expects to make a decision within 30 days.

Though he dismissed the notion that his yard is overrun with fourlegged pests, Adams conceded his neighborho­od hasn’t won the war on rats yet. “The entire block is infested,” he said.

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