Newly sworn-in mayor wants his younger brother to lead security detail, citing “white supremacy” threats
Eric Adams, who took over as mayor of New York City on January 1, has backpedaled from plans to make his brother Bernard a deputy police commissioner, but still wants him leading mayoral security for $210,000 a year.
Adams, a Democrat, initially sought to promote his younger sibling to deputy New York Police Department commissioner, until media reports over the weekend raised concerns over ethics and nepotism. On Wednesday, city officials said he will submit a waiver request to the Conflicts of Interest Board at some point this week to sort out the matter.
Under the mayor’s proposal, his younger sibling would serve as executive director of mayoral security, a position several rungs and $30,000 a year below the original posting. Bernard Adams, 56, had retired from NYPD with the rank of sergeant, and was last employed as assistant parking director at Virginia Commonwealth University.
Adams has defended the appointment, saying that “protection is personal” and his brother was the most qualified person for the job.
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“I trust my brother. My brother understands me and if I had to put my life in someone’s hands, I want to put it in the hands of the person that I trust deeply,” Adams told reporters on Sunday, after reports critical of the appointment first surfaced.
He said Bernard’s NYPD experience made him qualified amid what he described as “increased threats” and “a serious problem with white supremacy.”