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NYC real estate agent sidelined city contract competitor as ‘direct result' of ties to top Mayor Adams aides, lawsuit says

NYC real estate agent sidelined city contract competitor as ‘direct result' of ties to top Mayor Adams aides, lawsuit says

Yahoo13-02-2025

Diana Boutross, a New York real estate broker, was able to sideline a competitor from a lucrative city government contract and secure the deal for herself as a 'direct result' of her close relationship with Ingrid Lewis-Martin and Jesse Hamilton, two longtime aides to Mayor Adams, according to an updated lawsuit.
The revised lawsuit comes as Boutross, Hamilton and Lewis-Martin, who resigned as the mayor's chief adviser in December, all remain under scrutiny from the Manhattan district attorney's office.
All three got their phones seized by DA investigators in September after returning from a trip to Japan, and Lewis-Martin was days after her resignation indicted on bribery and money laundering charges stemming from an alleged real estate scheme that appears unconnected to any dealings with Boutross and Hamilton.
DA prosecutors said in court last week they are pursuing other 'ongoing investigations' touching on Lewis-Martin, and that other 'targets' of those probes are connected to her.
The lawsuit in question was first filed last month by Boutross' competitor, JRT Realty, against her firm, Cushman & Wakefield.
The suit claimed Hamilton, a top official at the city Department of Citywide Administrative Services, pressured Cushman & Wakefield to install Boutross as its main executive on a contract with Adams' administration under which she'd broker commercial property deals between private landlords and city agencies in exchange for hefty commissions.
JRT, a subcontractor on the DCAS deal entitled to share in those commissions, charged in the original suit Cushman & Wakefield acquiesced to Hamilton's demand and put Boutross in the post in late 2023, at which point she took allegedly illicit steps to block JRT from deals.
But an amended complaint submitted in Manhattan Supreme Court late Wednesday alleges Boutross couldn't pull off those moves alone, but relied on her connections to Lewis-Martin and Hamilton to do so.
'[Boutross and her co-defendants] were able to do so only as a direct result of Boutross's personal relationships with Hamilton and Lewis-Martin,' JRT wrote in the updated complaint, which now names Boutross as well as two colleagues as defendants, in addition to Cushman & Wakefield itself, accusing them of defamation, contract breaches, tortious business intereference and other civil counts.
Specifically, JRT claims Boutross had help from Lewis-Martin and Hamilton in securing 'modifications' to the city's Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises rules that allowed Boutross to more easily block JRT from sharing in commissions. The firm, which is women-owned, alleges in the suit that city administrative and contract laws were violated in the process of those modifications being made.
Lewis-Martin, who has pleaded not guilty in her criminal case, isn't named as a defendant in JRT's suit, and neither is Hamilton.
Attorneys and reps for Lewis-Martin, Hamilton and Boutross didn't immediately return requests for comment Thursday. In response to JRT's original suit, attorneys for Cushman & Wakefield denied wrongdoing and filed a motion asking a judge to dismiss the accusations.
Also in the updated suit, JRT alleged Boutross hinted she had friends in high places when she spoke with JRT executives in mid-2023, before she was selected to take over the DCAS contract.
After the JRT executives explained to her the complexities of pulling off a DCAS brokering deal, Boutross, who allegedly had no prior government leasing experience, would respond, 'Don't worry. I have a rabbi,' according to the suit. The phrase is commonly used to denote a person with high-up connections that can make a difficult situation easy.
Around the same time of those talks, Hamilton had lunch with Boutross, her boss at Cushman & Wakefield and others, JRT alleges. In that lunch, Hamilton made clear to Boutross' boss that she should be tapped to oversee the contract with DCAS, according to court papers.
'She is my broker,' Hamilton said in the meeting, pointing at Boutross, JRT alleges.
A spokeswoman for DCAS didn't immediately return a request for comment on the amended JRT suit.
The lawsuit's playing out as Lewis-Martin's bribery case remains pending, with her lawyer and prosecutors meeting for a brief court hearing Thursday to discuss trial preparations. She has been indicted alongside her son, who allegedly received most of the bribes his mother accepted from two real estate developers in exchange for help with building permits.
Unlike Adams — whose federal corruption case is in the process of being at least temporarily dismissed by President Trump's administration — Lewis-Martin was indicted by local prosecutors who have shown no sign of wanting to drop her case.

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Hamilton police officers who shot and killed Erixon Kabera cleared by SIU
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timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Hamilton police officers who shot and killed Erixon Kabera cleared by SIU

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Davenport driver arrested after police find wrecked car, cocaine and cash: Court records
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DA proposes anti-corruption commission amid NPA criticism on botched cases
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Our_DA / Twitter The DA has proposed an independent anti-corruption commission and constitutional reforms to strengthen the NPA. NPA head Shamila Batohi admitted setbacks in Timothy Omotoso and the Gupta brothers' extradition cases but defended the progress, blaming underfunding. Batohi insists the NPA is recovering from state capture's damage. The DA has called for sweeping reforms to the country's criminal justice system, including the establishment of an independent anti-corruption commission. The party accused the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) of systemic failures in the handling of high-profile corruption cases. Briefing the media on Friday, DA MPs Glynnis Breytenbach, Damien Klopper and Nicholas Gotsell outlined concerns over the NPA's inability to secure convictions in state capture cases. They cited recent blunders such as the botched extradition from the US of Moroadi Cholota, the ex-personal assistant of former Free State premier Ace Magashule. 'Monotonous' failures Breytenbach criticised the NPA for 'failing to prosecute with any kind of conviction', pointing to procedural errors in high-stakes cases. She highlighted the Cholota matter, where the Free State director of public prosecutions, rather than the justice minister, incorrectly applied for her extradition, a misstep that derailed the case. On Tuesday, the Bloemfontein High Court overturned Cholota's extradition from the US to face corruption charges in the ongoing R250 million Free State asbestos corruption case involving her former boss Magashule, businessperson Edwin Sodi and others. The court upheld a special plea Cholota raised on the NPA's decision to haul her back to SA. Cholota will no longer appear as a co-accused in the case. These mistakes keep happening with monotonous regularity. Glynnis Breytenbach Breytenbach added that not a single politically connected individual had been imprisoned for state capture. She cited other failures, including the Thales corruption case and the withdrawal of charges in the Phala Phala matter due to procedural errors. Klopper expanded on these concerns, referencing the high-profile case of Nigerian televangelist Timothy Omotoso, in which the NPA's mishandling led to a 'disastrous acquittal'. He also noted the DA's recent private prosecution of a common assault case after the NPA declined to pursue it, questioning the institution's capacity to handle even basic prosecutions. Omotoso was acquitted last month and later deported to Nigeria. Calls for structural reform The DA proposed three key interventions: An anti-corruption commission – A chapter 9 body independent of executive control, with its budget determined by National Treasury rather than the justice minister Strengthening NPA independence – Constitutional amendments to remove the president's sole power to appoint and dismiss the National Director of Public Prosecutions Capacitating the NPA – Urgent budget increases to fill vacancies and attract skilled prosecutors, alongside performance audits by the Auditor-General. Gotsell added that a 'watching brief' programme, piloted in the Western Cape, could improve the coordination between the NPA, the SA Police Service and the victims of crime. He also suggested employing final-year law students to assist the prosecutors with administrative tasks. Batohi defends NPA's record Meanwhile, NPA head Shamila Batohi, speaking on SABC News earlier in the day, acknowledged the setbacks but denied a crisis within the institution. Batohi admitted that the Omotoso case was 'devastating' but said the NPA was appealing the court judgment and it was also investigating prosecutors' conduct. On state capture, Batohi defended the NPA's progress in the cases, noting that the Investigating Directorate had enrolled 33 cases. However, she conceded that there were challenges, including underfunding and salary disparities that were driving skilled prosecutors to other agencies, and 'internal chaos' caused by some staff allegedly undermining the NPA's mission. There has been no political interference during my tenure, Shamila Batohi She admitted she could not guarantee that individual prosecutors were not influenced. She also expressed frustration over the delays in extraditing the Gupta brothers, blaming the United Arab Emirates (UAE) court's refusal and pledging to reapply with additional evidence. In 2023, the UAE dismissed SA's request to extradite the Guptas, and government's attempts have yielded no fruit since then. With her term ending in January next year, Batohi vowed to intensify efforts in the remaining months of her contract. The DA, however, remained sceptical, arguing that only bold reforms, not 'slapdash legislation', could restore public trust in the NPA.

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