NEW YORK, United States (CMC) — The Caribbean community in New York has expressed mixed reaction to the indictment of New York (NY) City Mayor Eric Adams on federal bribery and campaign finance offences. Damian Williams, the Jamaican-American United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, James E Dennehy, the assistant director in charge of the New York Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and Jocelyn E Strauber, the commissioner of the New York City Department of Investigation (DOI), announced on Thursday the unsealing of the indictment charging Adams, 64, with bribery, campaign finance and conspiracy offenses. “My opinion on the mayor’s indictment is that it’s a serious blow to his mayoralty and the Black American legacy,” Delroy Wright, the Jamaican-born, long-standing, pre-eminent community leader and entrepreneur in Flatbush said.

“However, I believe his cry that he was targeted. I also believe he puts the bullseye on his own back. He did so when he made comments calling out the president (Joe Biden) on the immigrant issues.

“I believe he has a legitimate cause in calling for help from Washington to provide more resources to the city to mitigate the immigrants’ crisis, but he erred in criticising Biden personally for lack thereof,” Wright said. “Now the legal process starts. The constitution is now in play, for which ‘you are innocent until proven guilty’.

This begs the question: Is the judicial system a perfec.