


Mayor Eric Adams of New York saw donations to his re-election campaign take a nosedive after his federal indictment last month on five counts of bribery, fraud and soliciting illegal foreign campaign donations.
Of the roughly $146,000 in donations reported for the filing period of July 12 to Oct. 7, only $250 was contributed after news broke of his indictment, according to the New York City Campaign Finance Board. It came from one unemployed donor on Sept. 26, the same day the federal indictment was unsealed.
The mayor’s haul was less than half the amount raised by Brad Lander, the city comptroller, who took in just over $315,000 for his mayoral campaign.
It was also 51 percent less than what Mr. Adams raised during the same period last year, when he received almost $296,000 in donations.
Scott M. Stringer, a former city comptroller who is running for mayor, raised $180,000 in the last three months. Zellnor Myrie, a state senator from Brooklyn who is also running for the office but is less well known, raised $137,000.