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Brooklyn Campaign Treasurer Charged for Fraud in Borough President Race

The defendant, Erlene King, used straw donors and submitted forged documents in an attempt to steal $400,000 in matching city funds, according to federal authorities.
borough_hall_of_brooklyn
Brooklyn Borough Hall.

A Brooklyn resident on Wednesday was charged with wire fraud in connection with her attempt to steal funds from New York City’s Campaign Finance
Board (CFB) during the 2021 Brooklyn Borough President race, according to federal authorities. 

Erlene King, 71, was charged by Breon Peace, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, according to a press release. 

King served as the campaign treasurer for what federal authorities described as "Candidate #1," who ran in a primary for the Office of the Brooklyn Borough President during the 2021 election cycle.

The candidate was identified as Anthony Jones by the New York Times

King obtained fraudulent donations worth $25,000 for the purpose of inducing the CFB to provide matching funds to the campaign totalling $400,000, according to court documents. 

A number of those contributions, which were obtained at King’s direction, were fraudulent nominee contributions made in the names of individuals who either did not personally fund the contributions or were later reimbursed for their contributions (i.e., straw donors).

For example, King used CashApp to send money to intermediaries and instructed them to distribute the money to fund contributions from straw donors to Candidate #1. Other fraudulent contributions were made in the names of individuals whose identities were stolen and who had not personally contributed to Candidate #1, the authorities said. 

The CFB ultimately determined that the campaign submitted fictitious records and did not pay any public matching funds to the campaign.

The CFB oversees and administers a publicly funded campaign finance system in connection with municipal elections in New York City. This includes a “matching funds program” that provides eligible candidates with public funds based on the number and amount of certain donor contributions. According to the CFB, the program “empowers New Yorkers in every neighborhood to make their voices heard in city elections” and “by encouraging candidates to raise small-dollar contributions from average New Yorkers, the program increases engagement between voters and those who seek to represent them.”

Candidates running for the Office of the Brooklyn Borough President in the 2021 election cycle were eligible to participate in the CFB’s matching funds program if they met certain criteria. Among other things, to be eligible to receive public funds, candidates were required to meet a two-part fundraising threshold. Specifically, a candidate had to collect a minimum number of donations and raise a minimum amount of money from New York City residents before the CFB paid any matching funds.

For candidates who ran for the Office of the Brooklyn Borough President during the 2021 election cycle, candidates received up to $8 in matching funds for each $1 of eligible contributions, up to $175 per contributor. In other words, if a candidate received an eligible contribution of $175, a candidate for the Office of the Brooklyn Borough President could collect up to $1,400 in matching funds. In total, the matching funds program provided up to $1,457,777 in public matching funds to a candidate for the Office of the Brooklyn Borough President. Because campaigns for Brooklyn Borough President during the 2021 election cycle needed to raise at least $50,000 in eligible contributions to receive any matching funds, any candidate who was eligible to receive matching funds necessarily received at least $400,000 in matching funds from the CFB.

If convicted, the defendant faces up to 20 years in prison, the press release said.




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