4 Top Officials Expected to Resign Over Adams’s Cooperation with Trump

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Four deputy mayors to Eric Adams are planning to leave in coming days after Eric Adams embraced President Trump’s immigration crackdown.

 Maria Torres-Springer, Meera Joshi, Anne Williams-Isom, and Chauncey Parker
Four deputy mayor, from left to right, Maria Torres-Springer, Meera Joshi, Anne Williams-Isom and Chauncey Parker, are expected to resign.Credit...James Estrin/The New York Times, Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images, Brittainy Newman for The New York Times

Feb. 17, 2025, 12:21 p.m. ET

Four top New York City officials are expected to resign in the coming days, after the outgoing U.S. attorney for Manhattan accused the mayor of trading cooperation with President Trump’s mass deportation agenda for a dismissal of his criminal indictment, according to three people with knowledge of their plans.

The four officials — Maria Torres-Springer, the first deputy mayor, and Meera Joshi, Anne Williams-Isom and Chauncey Parker, all also deputy mayors — oversee much of New York City government, and their departure is poised to blow a devastating hole in the already wounded administration of Mayor Eric Adams.

Mr. Adams, a Democrat, is resisting growing calls to resign. Gov. Kathy Hochul is also under increasing pressure to remove him from office.

The four officials who are expected to resign are all respected government veterans. Ms. Torres-Springer was elevated to the second most powerful job at City Hall in October in an effort to stabilize city government and restore confidence in his administration following the mayor’s federal indictment in September on five corruption counts.

The departure of Mr. Parker is particularly pointed because he is the deputy mayor for public safety who has been deeply involved in issues around the city’s role in the president’s deportation plans.

The intended resignations were first reported by WNBC.

“As we always say, if and when we have personnel announcements to make, we will make them,” said Kayla Mamelak-Altus, a spokeswoman for the mayor.

Reached by phone on Monday, Ms. Williams-Isom declined to comment. Ms. Joshi, Ms. Torres-Springer and Mr. Parker could not be reached for comment.

Jeffery C. Mays contributed reporting.

This is a developing story that will be updated.

William K. Rashbaum is a Times reporter covering municipal and political corruption, the courts and broader law enforcement topics in New York. More about William K. Rashbaum

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