UPDATE: Here’s what the feds have been asking about over the last 10 months.

FBI agents raided the home of Atlantic City Mayor Frank Gilliam just before 8 a.m. Monday morning, the agency confirmed to NJ Advance Media.

At least a dozen agents were seen going in and out of the Ohio Avenue home Monday morning, removing more than 10 boxes. An FBI spokeswoman at the scene said both FBI and IRS agents were involved in the search of home.

“We can confirm that our agents were executing search warrant at the home of Mayor Frank Gilliam,” said Doreen Holder, a public affairs specialist with the FBI’s Newark office, declining to comment on the reasons for the possible seizure of documents.

Throughout the morning, dozens of residents lined the street to watch as agents came and went. Around noon, a group about seven people starting praying on the street outside the mayor’s home.

At about 12:30 p.m. Gilliam came out of his home with his wife and drove away without making a comment.

Gilliam, a Democrat elected in November 2017, was also recently served with municipal criminal summons from a mid-November brawl at the Haven nightclub.

Gilliam and Councilman Jeffree Fauntleroy II were involved in a fight outside the Haven Nightclub at Golden Nugget Nov. 11 around 2:22 a.m. People involved allege the elected officials assaulted them and chased them with a car.

Last week, the Cape May Prosecutor’s Office said it would not press charges against either Gilliam or Fauntleroy. The two will still face citizens' complaints filed against them from the incident. They are currently scheduled to appear in a courtroom in North Wildwood Dec. 11.

And in an unrelated matter, a criminal complaint was filed against the mayor in Superior Court over a $10,000 check to the Atlantic City Democratic Committee which was deposited into the mayor’s own campaign account.

Gilliam said the check was deposited into his account in error. In April, Superior Court Judge Bernard DeLury dismissed the charges saying there was not “even a scintilla of evidence” of wrongdoing in the matter, and the state dropped the case.