New York Daily News

Builder: I did squeal in deal that sank Benjamin

- BY MOLLY CRANE-NEWMAN

A Harlem real estate developer flipped on disgraced ex-Lt. Gov. Brian Benjamin in a secret plea hearing last month, according to court documents unsealed Tuesday.

Gerald Migdol’s guilty plea in Manhattan Federal Court on April 11 came five months after his indictment for trying to scam the city’s system for matching campaign donations. He admitted to organizing and concealing tens of thousands of dollars in fake contributi­ons from 2019 to 2021 for Benjamin’s failed city comptrolle­r bid — including one from his 2-year-old relative — to boost the candidate’s campaign war chest. Migdol also pleaded guilty to defrauding banks from 2018 to 2019.

“I entered into a quid pro quo agreement with Brian Benjamin, who was then a state senator. Specifical­ly, he offered to obtain a $50,000 state grant for my charitable organizati­on in exchange for campaign contributi­ons that I agreed to give him and procure for him,” Migdol told the court, according to an unsealed transcript of the hearing.

“The fraudulent contributi­ons were intended to enable Brian Benjamin’s campaign to procure public matching funds under false pretenses.”

Benjamin resigned hours after his April 12 indictment on federal corruption charges related to his role in the alleged scheme to steer state funds to Migdol’s nonprofit, Friends of Public School Harlem, in exchange for the straw donations.

Migdol’s plea carries up to 107 years in prison. Prosecutor­s say they’ll seek leniency on his behalf in exchange for his cooperatio­n, filings show.

A source familiar with the matter previously told the Daily News that Migdol, 72, was ready and willing to flip on the lieutenant governor after his November 2021 arrest. The unsealed filings are the first official confirmati­on Migdol is cooperatin­g with the feds.

Benjamin first asked Migdol (photo) for help fund-raising for his city campaign at the developer’s home in March 2019, according to the indictment. When Migdol said he relied on the same donor pool to fund his nonprofit, Benjamin allegedly hatched a plan to get both men compensate­d.

Migdol’s lawyer Joel Cohen did not immediatel­y respond to a request seeking comment. Benjamin and his attorneys could not be reached

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