Cache of sealed documents inMayorEricAdamscriminalcaserevealed giving inside look at prosecution that will never be

A massive cache of documents in Mayor Eric Adams’ historic corruption case was unsealed on Friday — giving the public an inside look at the prosecution that will never materialize in a federal courtroom.The 1,785 pages of court filings, unveiled after The Post and other outlets demanded access, are set to include unredacted warrants, such as the one for Hizzoner’s cellphone that agents seized on a New York City street.Some 50 court exhibits were included in the document dump.Affidavits describing evidence collected in the case are also expected to be revealed.Manhattan Federal Judge Dale Ho ordered that documents be made public last month, siding with the media that the release was in the best interest of New Yorkers as the city enters election season with City Hall up for grabs on the November ballot.Adams’ corruption case was dismissed, with no option to resurrect the case on the federal level, in early April by Judge Ho who broke the Department of Justice, which wanted the ability to potentially prosecute Adams at a later date.Ho ruled the Trump administration should not be able to hold the case over the mayor’s head while he runs the Big Apple.Ho skewered the DOJ’s dismissal motion in his long-awaited 78-page ruling, writing, “Everything here smacks of a bargain.”“[D]ismissal of the indictment in exchange for immigration policy concessions.” Days after The Post and New York Times, along with other third parties, urged the judge to release the sealed documents.
Ho granted the motion on March 28, ordering the DOJ to drop the document by May 2.The feds, though, blew the deadline and asked the judge the next day for more time, delaying the release a week.Adams became the first sitting New York City mayor to be indicted last September when a five-count indictment was unsealed, accusing him of accepting tens of thousands of dollars in luxury travel by foreign officials looking to buy influence in City Hall.Prosecutors in the Southern District of N...