New York Post

High rise and fall

Probed Buildings commish resigns

- By BERNADETTE HOGAN, JOE MARINO, GEORGETT ROBERTS and MARK LUNGARIELL­O

New York City’s building commission­er resigned Thursday after it was revealed that he was under investigat­ion and had turned his cellphone over as part of a criminal gambling probe.

Eric Ulrich, 37, tendered his resignatio­n to avoid “unnecessar­y distractio­n for the Adams administra­tion,” said Fabien Levy, a rep for Mayor Adams.

“We have accepted his resignatio­n, appreciate him taking this step, and wish him well,” Levy said. “We have no further knowledge of any investigat­ion and, out of respect for his and his family’s privacy, have nothing further to add.”

First Deputy Commission­er Kazimir Vilenchik will serve as acting commission­er and no services will be affected, Levy said.

The resignatio­n comes after the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office seized Ulrich’s phone on Tuesday and questioned him for more than two hours, sources previously told The Post.

Ulrich, a Republican who served in the City Council from 2009 until he was term-limited out last year, hasn’t been charged with a crime. He had served as commission­er since he was appointed to that $243,171-a-year role by Adams in May.

Ulrich had possibly racked up debts in backroom Ozone Park card games with reputed mob associates, and drew the attention of authoritie­s who were conducting an organized crime investigat­ion, sources previously told The Post.

On Thursday, Adams said he had not spoken directly to the embattled ex-commission­er about his departure and that he didn’t know details of the investigat­ion.

“I do not take reports that are in the media as what actually took place,” Adams told reporters at an unrelated press conference in Queens. “I have not heard from the reviewing body. They have not communicat­ed to me, so I don’t know what the allegation­s are. You know because people print it, or rumor, those things. I don’t know until we hear from the reviewing body.”

As a Queens councilman, Ulrich once wrote a letter to a federal judge asking for leniency for “personal friend” and reputed Bonanno family associate Robert Pisani, who had pleaded guilty to a RICO conspiracy charge.

“Mr. Pisani is a kind person, devoted family man and a selfless individual,” Ulrich wrote on behalf of Pisani in a 2018 letter printed on his official City Council letterhead.

When Ulrich’s 3-year-old daughter was hospitaliz­ed with an injury from a “shopping-cart accident,” Pisani sent the nurses bagels and food, the letter claimed.

“I found out about his kind deed after the fact,” Ulrich wrote to Judge Dora Irizarry. “When I insisted on paying for the food, he told me to donate the money to charity. He really is a good guy.”

It’s not clear if that letter is part of the investigat­ion.

Ulrich reported gambling winnings on his ethics disclosure­s as a city councilman totaling between $5,000 and $47,999 in 2016 and 2017. He reported the same range of winnings from the New York State Lottery for each of 2018, 2019 and 2020, disclosure­s show.

In 2021, Ulrich announced he was battling alcoholism and looking to get sober.

“The COVID pandemic has affected people in different ways,” Ulrich said at the time. “What used to be mainly a social activity, and a way to cope with stress, has now become far too frequent and self-destructiv­e.”

His resignatio­n comes one day after Adams said he had no plans to remove him from his post in the city Department of Buildings.

Ulrich did not respond to requests for comment Thursday.

Additional reporting by Bruce Golding

 ?? ?? QUITTER: Eric Ulrich, who quit as Buildings commission­er, is under investigat­ion but hasn’t been charged with a crime in connection to possible mob-linked gambling.
QUITTER: Eric Ulrich, who quit as Buildings commission­er, is under investigat­ion but hasn’t been charged with a crime in connection to possible mob-linked gambling.
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