The day the 20-page indictment was unsealed alleging huge corruption at Bhrags Residence Care, a non-profit awarded tens of millions of {dollars} in no-bid metropolis migrant shelter contracts, the Brooklyn U.S. legal professional spoke up. So did the appearing head of the town’s Division of Investigation, and the assistant director answerable for the FBI’s New York workplace.
Lacking from the scene was Brad Lander, the longtime elected official who was serving as the town’s chief monetary officer in the course of the time of this alleged malfeasance and the town was steering increasingly more taxpayer cash to Bhrags.
Lander had been the metropolis comptroller, however he by no means audited Bhrags, regardless of being formally notified of kickback allegations that had been public for months. On the time he realized this in 2024, Lander had simply introduced he was becoming a member of the 2025 mayor’s race.
In the meantime, the Division of Homeless Providers (DHS) greater than doubled the group’s contract awards to $68 million whereas it was being run by a director prosecutors would finally identify as considered one of two masterminds of corruption that value the town tens of millions.
The truth is, amid a deluge of emergency metropolis contracts to deal with the town’s migrant disaster, Comptroller Lander audited just one vendor offering migrant-related providers, Speedy Dependable Testing, also referred to as DocGo. That’s out of greater than 340 migrant providers contracts Mayor Eric Adams inked in 2022 and 2023.
In a number of information interviews, Lander has emphasised that his expertise and achievements as the town’s high monetary officer make him greater than certified to serve in Congress as he challenges Rep. Dan Goldman within the Democratic major for a seat representing decrease Manhattan and a part of Brooklyn.

“My audits rooted out Eric Adams’ corruption, canceling his $432 million crony contract to DocGo, and saved the Metropolis billions of {dollars},” he stated in a single candidate questionnaire. However critics say he was asleep on the swap within the case of Bhrags.
Claude Millman, a associate at Kostelanetz LLP and former head of the Mayor’s Workplace of Contracts Providers, examined the Bhrags contract data on the request of The Metropolis Reporter and famous that Lander’s workplace had accredited a Bhrags contract enhance in 2025, months after he was instructed in 2024 about corruption issues on the non-profit.
“From the Metropolis’s public databases, it’s clear that in February 2025, the town added $92,844 to a contract with Bhrags Residence Care Corp., and the town comptroller was concerned within the technique of amending that contract and including these funds,” Millman stated.
Emily Minster, a spokesperson for Lander’s congressional marketing campaign, declined to reply questions on his response to Bhrags after he was knowledgeable of the corruption allegations there. She referred The Metropolis Reporter to the present comptroller, Mark Levine, who didn’t maintain that workplace when the Bhrags allegations first surfaced.
A spokesperson for Levine pointed to metropolis data displaying that the contract started in Could 2023 and that the comptroller’s workplace was notified of the Bhrags corruption allegations in September 2024. Levine took workplace 15 months later, on Jan 1 of this 12 months.
The executives at DocGo, the only contractor that Lander did audit, had been by no means charged with against the law. Bhrags’ high two officers had been, and the fallout from the prison case towards them left a number of unanswered questions that solely an auditor may reply as to the place tens of millions of {dollars} the town paid to Bhrags wound up.
Kickback Allegations
The indictment described two schemes orchestrated by Bhrags Govt Director Roberto Samedy and its president, Ronald Tirelus: the embezzlement of $1.3 million from the group, and a kickback scheme during which a share of the cash the town paid Bhrags for safety at migrant shelters wound up in Tirelus and Samedy’s pockets.
And much more taxpayer cash could possibly be lacking: Fort NYC Safety, the safety agency on the heart of the kickback caper, claims a few of the cash DHS paid to Bhrags for safety by no means acquired handed on to them. (The agency’s proprietor, Edouardo St. Fort, was additionally named within the indictment).

Bhrags first started successful migrant shelter contracts within the fall of 2022. Inside months one contract grew to 5 — all no-bid.
Metropolis procurement guidelines usually require that businesses search a number of aggressive bids for main contracts, with the comptroller vetting the successful bid. However in an emergency, the comptroller can waive this oversight and permit businesses to ditch the aggressive bidding course of.
In July 2022 at Adams’ request, Lander granted the waiver and, per the town constitution, he and the company counsel — the town’s high lawyer — started approving every “emergency” contract requested by the administration. That meant the comptroller’s workplace signed off on hiring Bhrags with out trying into the group’s observe document.
The variety of no-bid migrant providers contracts grew exponentially, and by September 2023 Lander was elevating issues, warning at one Metropolis Council listening to of a “larger danger of waste and fraud, as businesses scramble to obtain items and providers with much less time and competitors.”
As Comptroller Lander started focusing extra consideration on these contracts, he launched one report discovering a scarcity of coordination between the half-dozen metropolis businesses dealing with migrant service contracts that resulted in overpayments of tens of millions of {dollars} for workers, and one other report per-diem resort prices which he discovered had been, for essentially the most half, consistent with market charges for economic system lodging.
However he didn’t goal particular contracts for scrutiny — with one exception.
In September 2023, months earlier than he introduced his candidacy for mayor, Lander introduced his first and solely “actual time audit,” of a $432 million no-bid deal awarded to DocGo. He made the announcement solely after state Lawyer Basic Letitia James introduced she’d initiated an investigation into the contractor and after the New York Instances reported on migrants alleging the agency’s staff had misled and mistreated them.

In a Sept. fifteenth letter from Lander to Adolfo Carrión Jr., then-commissioner of the Division of Housing Preservation and Improvement (HPD), the company that employed DocGo, the comptroller warned: “The contract with DocGo additionally raises broader issues relating to the Adams Administration’s utilization of emergency procurement.”
Housing Commissioner Carrión knowledgeable Lander he wouldn’t cancel the contract and would proceed counting on DocGo to offer migrant-related providers. In his correspondence with Carrión, Lander made some extent of mentioning the significance of businesses correctly vetting the integrity of subcontractors introduced in by the distributors they rent — a difficulty that had risen with DocGo.
Because it occurred, one other metropolis company — the Division of Homeless Providers — was elevating alarms about Fort NYC Safety, a subcontractor employed by Bhrags. By early 2024,. By early 2024, DHS had cancelled Fort NYC Safety’s subcontract after it realized of kickback allegations contained in a Dec. 18, 2023, lawsuit Fort NYC Safety filed towards Bhrags.
Within the lawsuit, the safety agency claimed Bhrags’ then-chairman and president, Tirelus, had pressured them to separate all safety funds DHS made to Bhrags 50/50 by way of a shell company Tirelus arrange.
The Lacking Million
And Fort NYC claimed much more cash that the homeless providers division paid to Bhrags for safety could also be lacking. Data stored by the comptroller’s workplace present Fort NYC Safety was allegedly paid $1,007,182 as a Bhrags subcontractor. However James Kousouros, an legal professional representing Edouardo St. Fort, instructed The Metropolis Reporter: “My shopper didn’t obtain that cash.”
In a second lawsuit, Fort NYC sued DHS, claiming that whereas the division continued to allot cash to Bhrags for safety, Bhrags had stopped paying them in December 2023 — and Fort was nonetheless owed $607,000.
Lander’s predecessor as comptroller, Scott Stringer, instructed The Metropolis Reporter that when Lander was knowledgeable of the corruption allegations at Bhrags, he ought to have instantly launched an audit and rejected rising the scale of the Bhrags contracts.
“This contract ought to have been rejected. You do a complete due diligence,” stated Stringer, who has endorsed Rep. Dan Goldman, whom Lander is difficult within the Democratic major for New York’s tenth Congressional District.
The Division of Social Providers (DSS), which oversees DHS, imposed the “Corrective Motion Plan” on Bhrags on Sept. 11, 2024, and knowledgeable Comptroller Lander about it. The 8-page doc references the lawsuits that alleged a kickback scheme and lacking cash. It was signed by Samedy, who was later indicted.
Neha Sharma, a spokesperson for the Division of Social Providers, stated the company “was proactively trying into Roberto Samedy and did elevate questions on conflicts of curiosity as outlined within the corrective motion plan. On the time, Samedy misrepresented the information and affirmatively acknowledged in writing that he had nothing to do with the problematic transactions and affiliations.”
Lander realized of the issues at Bhrags simply two months after asserting an finally failed run for mayor. A current Politico report famous that because the marketing campaign ramped up, Lander stored his official schedule as comptroller fully empty on 33 weekdays, and listed just one or two occasions on one other 99 weekdays. Lander’s spokesperson, Minton, responded by touting his metropolis pension fund investments and “138 arduous hitting audits.”
Bhrags, the topic of sworn allegations of corruption, was not on that checklist.
Regardless of the kickback and lacking cash allegations, the Division of Homeless Providers had determined the remedial motion plan was sufficient to allay issues about corruption at Bhrags: between February and June 2024, DHS greater than doubles Bhrags’ accredited contract quantities from $31.4 million to $68.5 million.
However DHS’s mother or father company notified the town’s Division of Investigation, which initiated the probe that finally led to federal indictment. On March 31 of this 12 months, Samedy, Tirelus, St. Fort, the proprietor of Fort NYC Safety, and one other Bhrags subcontractor, Miguel Jorge, had been all arrested on a number of federal felony expenses filed by Brooklyn U.S. Lawyer Joseph Nocella Jr. All have pleaded not responsible.
‘A Few Unhealthy Actors’
As for Bhrags, the group is required to reveal its “corrective motion plan” if it bids on any future metropolis work. All of its migrant providers contracts are scheduled to wrap up on the finish of this month.
For the reason that indictment, the Division of Social Providers has lower the group’s shelter portfolio from 9 websites to 4, and the Investigations Division is making ready to position Bhrags right into a monitorship that would offer impartial oversight of the group. In keeping with the company’s spokesperson, Neha Sharma, Bhrags has new management and has up to now fulfilled its necessities below the corrective plan.
“We all know that frontline staffers working throughout our supplier community step as much as ship high quality providers for susceptible New Yorkers and do the correct factor each day,” Sharma added. “A number of dangerous actors and actions on the govt stage don’t signify the work of the group as a complete.”
Frances Pierce, the interim govt director who changed Samedy after he was indicted, supplied a quick assertion Thursday:
“Serving people in want with integrity and the best moral requirements has been on the coronary heart of our work for greater than 50 years, and we stay as dedicated as ever to enhancing the standard of life for these people and being a trusted useful resource to our authorities company companions,” she stated.

