Mayor Eric Adams' former chief adviser, her son and two real estate investors were indicted on Thursday on bribery and conspiracy charges, a case that comes as the mayor himself fights a separate corruption case and a series of criminal investigations roils City Hall.
Ingrid Lewis-Martin, who until recently was one of the most powerful people in city government, was brought into a Manhattan courtroom in handcuffs. She, her son Glenn D. Martin II — a DJ who once performed at City Hall — and real estate investors Raizada Vaid and Mayank Dwivedi pleaded not guilty as prosecutors accused the four of engaging in a blatant pay-to-play scheme.
What You Need To Know
- Mayor Eric Adams' former chief adviser Ingrid Lewis-Martin, her son and two real estate investors were charged Thursday in an alleged bribery conspiracy
- The charges come as the mayor himself faces a separate corruption case and a series of criminal investigations roils City Hall
- Lewis-Martin, who resigned Sunday from her role as one of the most powerful officials in City Hall, has said she's being “falsely accused”
“This was an unfettered, on-call, quid pro quo arrangement” in which Lewis-Martin and her son raked in over $100,000 in cash and other help in exchange for her speeding approvals for construction projects, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said at a news conference.
He said the scheme went on during much of Lewis-Martin's nearly three-year tenure as Mayor Eric Adams' chief adviser — a post she left only last weekend.
Lewis-Martin's lawyer, Arthur Aidala, described his client as “a model citizen to the city of New York.”
In a statement released Thursday, Aidala maintained the district attorney’s office’s “interpretation of these facts will make no sense to any New York jury.”
“To think that a high ranking city official would take a bribe in the form of a check deposited into their own bank account defies common sense,” he said. “We look forward to the citizens of the city of New York, who Ingrid has served so admirably for decades, clearing her name after a trial.”
But prosecutors said in a court document that she “abused her position and sold her influence to enrich herself and her family.”
Prosecutors wrote that the developers repeatedly asked Lewis-Martin for help getting approvals for such projects as a rooftop bar and a hotel, and she in turn pressed officials in the city's Department of Buildings to take action, which they did.
“Again and again, she delivered for them," said Bragg.
In return, the developers paid $100,000 to Lewis-Martin's son, who put the money in an account he shared with her, and used some of it to buy a $113,000 Porsche last year, prosecutors said in the court document. They said the son also got help from the businessmen with some of his own ventures.
The son, as DJ Suave Luciano, played at a June reception organized by City Hall.
Dwivedi, a hotelier with a background in finance, is listed online as one of the owners of LDV at The Maidstone, a boutique hotel in swanky East Hampton, New York.
Lewis-Martin tried to cover her tracks by communicating with Vaid through Signal, an encrypted messaging app, in December 2022, prosecutors wrote.
At one point in January 2023, he texted her, “I need this favor. This is still stuck at DOB. . . . Please get this through," according to the court document.
“Please only use Signal for asks," she responded, adding ““Next time just text me ‘trying to reach you(’) and I will Look for it."
The same day, Lewis-Martin forwarded Vaid’s requests to the acting buildings commissioner, according to the court document. It said a buildings department employee met with Vaid the next day.
Bragg also is prosecuting a separate bribery conspiracy case against former buildings commissioner, Eric Ulrich, who has pleaded not guilty. But no buildings department employees or officials have been charged in the alleged scheme involving Lewis-Martin. Ulrich's successor was the one who received her messages, and it's unclear whether anyone at the agency had any inkling of the alleged pay-to-play behind the scenes.
Lewis-Martin, 63, has been one of the mayor’s closest confidants, serving in senior roles as Adams ascended the ranks of government in New York over nearly two decades. She resigned Sunday.
She has said she's being “falsely accused” and that she had “not made any arrangements in advance to take any gifts or money, or to have any gifts or money given to a family member or friend in order for me to do my job.”
She surrendered Thursday morning at Bragg's lower Manhattan office.
Prosecutors met her at an airport in New York in September as she was getting off a flight from Japan. The federal prosecutors served her with a subpoena while Manhattan prosecutors took her phones and searched her home.
In addition to the charges outlined Thursday, prosecutors said in court that Lewis-Martin is the subject of several ongoing investigations.
Bragg noted that the case against Lewis-Martin doesn't allege that Adams did anything criminal. He said the mayor isn't a target of state prosecutors' investigation.
Federal prosecutors charged Adams in September with accepting luxury travel perks and illegal campaign contributions from a Turkish official and other foreign nationals looking to buy his influence. That investigation became public late last year after federal agents searched the home of the mayor's top fundraiser, Brianna Suggs. Lewis-Martin has referred to Suggs as her goddaughter.
The mayor, a Democrat like Bragg, has pleaded not guilty to charges of conspiracy, wire fraud and bribery. His federal trial is scheduled for next April.
Since then, the Adams administration has been enveloped by a series of searches and seizures from investigators, leading to the resignations of top officials including his police commissioner, schools chancellor, multiple deputy mayors and his director of Asian affairs.