Encrypted Apps Can Protect Your Privacy — Unless You Use Them Like Eric Adams

An Eric Adams staffer excused herself from an FBI interview to go to the bathroom, allegedly to delete encrypted messaging apps.

Eric Adams' arraignment at the Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse on September 28, 2024. Eric Adams walks to his SUV. Photo: SWinxy Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
Nikita Mazurov, The Intercept
Nikita Mazurov, The Intercept
Nikita Mazurov is a security researcher focusing on privacy issues revolving around source protection, counter-forensics, and privacy assurance.

Digital security appears to be a fixation of New York Mayor Eric Adams and his staff, at least according to his indictment on multiple charges, including soliciting and receiving campaign contributions from a foreign national, bribery, and wire fraud. 

But then why were they so bad at it?

Case in point: The indictment quotes a text message exchange between Adams and an unnamed staffer, in which the staffer allegedly tells Adams to “be o[n the] safe side Please Delete all messages you send me.” 

Adams, according to the indictment, texts back, “Always do.”

It goes without saying that this policy of deleting messages did not prevent investigators from discovering these communications.

Nor did an alleged attempt by the same staff member to delete encrypted messaging apps after asking for a bathroom break during a meeting with FBI agents. The staff member, according to the indictment, asked to excuse herself from the conversation, then removed from her phone the apps she had used to communicate with Adams, a Turkish official who coordinated various dealings with Adams, and others. 

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Nikita Mazurov is a security researcher focusing on privacy issues revolving around source protection, counter-forensics, and privacy assurance.