NEW YORK — Lt. Gov. Brian Benjamin surrendered to federal authorities on Tuesday morning.
As CBS2’s Marcia Kramer reported, he is facing federal bribery and conspiracy charges.
WEB EXTRA: Read the indictment
The indictment throws a giant monkey wrench into Gov. Kathy Hochul‘s campaign for re-election. Ironically, less than a week ago Benjamin was front and center when the governor announced a budget agreement.
“I have utmost confidence in my lieutenant governor. This is an independent investigation linked to other people and he is fully cooperating. He is my running mate,” Hochul said on April 7.
READ MORE: Hochul’s gubernatorial campaign suddenly has questions due to federal probe of Lt. Gov. Benjamin
Benjamin was at Hochul’s side when she announced a state budget agreement last week, but it’s unlikely he’ll be by her side anymore.
The federal indictment not only charges the former Harlem state senator with participating in an alleged campaign donation shakedown, but also with filing false vetting forms when he was under consideration for the number two job in the state.
Benjamin was asked about the vetting process and the federal investigation.
“The state police did a thorough investigation. I participated in that. The state police gave a recommendation to the governor and that was the process that’s typically the process for appointment. I followed the process as it was supposed to be followed,” Benjamin said.
The indictment centers on a number of things, including charges that Benjamin allegedly falsified documents to become lieutenant governor, and a reported scheme to get illegal donations for his failed city comptroller’s campaign last year from a Harlem real estate developer in exchange for a $50,000 state grant, Kramer reported.
Sources told CBS2 that the real estate developer is Gerald Migdol, who has been indicted on charges of concealing and misrepresenting dozens of illegal contributions to Benjamin. According to the indictment, Benjamin reportedly got Migdol to help him get small donor contributions so he could qualify for city matching funds.
Hochul was asked about the situation at Tuesday’s news conference on the Brooklyn subway shooting, but said she’d have a comment later in the day.
It’s unclear whether she can get Benjamin off the June 28 primary ballot. It’s also unclear if this will boost the chances of her challengers.
One of her Democratic opponents, Congressman Tom Suozzi, issued the following statement:
“Today’s bombshell is an indictment on Kathy Hochul’s lack of experience and poor judgment. Hochul’s first decision was to pick her LG, who she entrusted with leading her failed bail reform effort, negotiating the budget, and last week said she had the utmost faith in him despite many reports of investigations into his conduct in office.
“Hochul has fostered a culture of continued corruption with months of fundraising from pay-to-play insiders and people doing business with the state, and secretive budget deals that resulted in the billion dollar Bills stadium and little else.
“The Suozzi/Reyna ticket will clean up this corrupt mess, combat crime, cut taxes by 10 percent, reduce gas prices and utility bills, and put hard working New Yorkers first.”
Check back soon for more on this developing story.