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Frank Carone's Attorney Argues "Glaring Holes" in Grand Jury Bribery Indictment

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Why it matters

Frank Carone, former chief of staff to New York City Mayor Eric Adams, faces a 13-count federal indictment alleging he accepted $120,000 in bribes to secure a $6.8 million migrant shelter contract for a Queens hotel owner. Prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York charge that Carone used his position in 2022 to override Department of Social Services rejections and steer the contract to the Microtel Inn in Long Island City, with monthly payments of $10,000 funneled through his brother Anthony and disguised as legal fees. The indictment also names hotel owner Yan Po Zhu and his business manager Crystal Chen. Carone was arrested on June 24, 2026.

Carone's defense team has publicly challenged the prosecution's case, asserting the indictment contains "glaring holes" that undermine the bribery and money laundering charges. The specifics of those alleged evidentiary gaps remain unclear. A provisional trial date is set for August 2026, though Judge Kiyo A. Matsumoto has indicated it may slip given the massive discovery obligations—prosecutors have flagged approximately one million pages of material.

Attorneys should monitor this case as it directly implicates Adams' administration during an intensifying period of legal scrutiny around City Hall. The defense's early public critique of the government's evidence suggests potential vulnerabilities in the prosecution's theory. The outcome will likely influence how federal investigators approach similar corruption allegations involving municipal officials and contractors exploiting the city's migrant crisis response.

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