Eric Adams has said that “all my haters become my waiters when I sit down at the table of success.” The haters are no longer waiters—on Wednesday, September 25, amidst widening investigations into his inner circle, Adams was indicted by federal prosecutors from the Southern District of New York. There’s no better time to pull up a chair to the Table of Success. 

Who’s at the table? How are they related? Why do they matter? And who’s under investigation?

Browse the mayor’s connections:

… or take a look at everyone:

Timothy Pearson

Timothy Pearson is Mayor Adams’s right-hand man—a hand that, at least once, curled into a fist.

Billy Bildstein

The owner of Avant Gardner and Brooklyn Mirage fought the SLA and won (with help from powerful friends).

Max Young

Adams’s comms director left the administration to work for Pfizer, but will he come back to help his old boss win reelection in 2025?

Tiffany Raspberry

A lobbyist and long-time friend now has a lot of power in City Hall—and she’s not afraid to use it.

Lisa White

Eric Adams’s former roommate (or is it landlord?) in charge of NYPD officer morale—too bad she tanks it.

Evan Thies

A political consultant and one of the main architects of Adams’s mayoral election, whom Adams described as “the man that captured my voice” and “my brother.”

Tony Argento

New York City’s homegrown film studio mogul is a Gotham power broker out of central casting.

Rana Abbasova

Abbasova’s job is to keep City Hall friendly with foreign governments. And maybe…they all became a little too friendly.

Winnie Greco

Winnie Greco connected the Chinese business community to the future mayor. In return, he promised to build an arch.

Bernard Adams

Younger brother Bernard Adams couldn’t make it past the City’s ethics board—but his wife, Sharon, sure did.

Jeffrey Maddrey

The top uniformed cop in the NYPD, despite a wild history of disciplinary charges.

Philip Banks III

From unindicted co-conspirator in a federal corruption case to Mayor Adams’s deputy mayor for public safety in less than a decade.

Sheena Wright

The nonprofit professional (with a somewhat checkered past) is quickly rising through the ranks at City Hall.

Denise Felipe-Adams

An enthusiastic Adams loyalist dipping her toes into crypto.

Sylvia Cowan

Former girlfriend with whom he still owns an apartment.

Peter Koo

Senior advisor to the Deputy Mayor of Public Safety. What does that even mean, man?

Brendan McGuire

When it comes to fending off a public corruption case, it doesn’t hurt to have a lawyer who has friends in the Southern District.

Jenifer Rajkumar

Adams has called her a “beast.” She thinks he’s “the GOAT.” 

Frank Carone

New York City’s short king is the most connected man in town.

Tracey Collins

Adams’s longtime girlfriend, who lives in Fort Lee, New Jersey, is rarely seen in his presence, and got a cushy promotion and a big raise after he became mayor.

Louis Molina

As Correction commissioner, he stymied jail oversight and presided over dozens of deaths of people in custody.

Jacqui Williams

“Real estate is not to be toyed with here.”

Ingrid Lewis-Martin

Already a legendary and uniquely powerful force within the Adams administration, the mayor’s most fiercely loyal deputy stares down a federal investigation into her boss’ campaign.

Brianna Suggs

Eric Adams hired her when she was 19. Six and a half years and millions of dollars in mayoral campaign fundraising later, the FBI raided her apartment.

Jordan Coleman

Eric Adams’s literal son.

Scott Sartiano

How did the owner of Zero Bond score a seat on the Met’s board? Probably not based on his resume, which we got our hands on.

Victoria Schneps-Yunis

Queens newspaper magnate whose own rise mirrors that of Adams.

Bishop Lamor Whitehead

The “Bling Bishop” and Eric Adams apparently don’t speak anymore, but both say that God is on their side.

Douglas Durst

Real estate titan who wants to weaken New York City’s climate laws.

Marc Holliday

When you want to build a casino in Times Square, you hire the mayor’s former chief of staff and host parties with Cara Delevingne.

Michael Mazzio

Michael Mazzio found himself getting shut out of the lucrative tow truck industry—until he found a friendly ear in City Hall.

Eleonora Srugo

This high-powered real estate agent can be found at Casa Cipriani or Gracie Mansion.

Steve Cohen

Steve Cohen wants two things—a Mets championship and a casino. Eric Adams can only really help him with one of those.

Vito Pitta

The grandson of a hotel union boss whose family law firm is heading Adams’s legal defense fund.

Eric Ulrich

Gambling, tow trucks, pizza: the Manhattan DA’s indictment against Adams’s former building commissioner has it all.

Ydanis Rodriguez

A ride-or-die Eric Adams campaign surrogate scored a powerful post overseeing NYC’s streets, but so far that has meant taking a back seat to the mayor’s bureaucrats.

Brock Pierce

Crypto-enthusiast who says he’s advising Adams on “all things crypto.”

Rich Maroko

The head of the Hotel and Gaming Trades Council bet big on Eric Adams becoming mayor. Will it pay off?

Kaz Daughtry

Jeffrey Maddrey’s hands-on protégé, now NYPD drone champion.

John Chell

Shot a man to death in 2008, now in charge of the largest bureau in the NYPD.

Jay-Z

Jay-Z is a billionaire who wants things billionaires want—like a license to build a casino.

Robert and Zhan Petrosyants

Fun-loving twins who play host to the mayor at their trendy Italian eatery.

Dwayne Montgomery

An old friend the mayor doesn’t care to claim, indicted in a straw donor scheme.

Edward Caban

The Adams administration’s second police commissioner is a team player and a Masonic brother.

Rachel Atcheson

A nice vegan caught up in a nasty campaign finance scandal.

Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn

Bichotte Hermelyn is helping to stifle progressives at every turn, just how Eric Adams likes it. 

David Banks

One of the Banks brothers, now finds himself at the top of a teetering schools system. 

Fabien Levy

Levy has risen in influence as his colleagues in the City Hall press shop have departed, and the deputy mayor runs interference for the mayor in his dealings with the press.