Public Hearing - March 4, 2026

    


 1      BEFORE THE NEW YORK STATE SENATE
        STANDING COMMITTEE ON CODES
 2      AND
        STANDING COMMITTEE ON CONSUMER PROTECTION
 3      ----------------------------------------------------

 4                     JOINT PUBLIC HEARING:

 5       CURRENT PATTERNS IN WHITE-COLLAR CRIME AND FRAUD,
              AND POSSIBLE UPDATES TO LAWS PROTECTING
 6                    NEW YORKERS AND MARKETS

 7
        ----------------------------------------------------
 8

 9                                 Date:  March 4, 2026
                                   Time:  9:30 a.m.
10

11      PRESIDING:

12         Senator Zellnor Y. Myrie, Chairman
           NYS Senate Standing Committee on Codes
13
           Senator Rachel May, Chairman
14         NYS Senate Standing Committee on
           Consumer Protection
15

16      PRESENT:

17         Senator Jabari Brisport

18         Senator Dean Murray

19

20

21

22

23

24

25







                                                             2
 1      SPEAKERS:                               PAGE  QUESTIONS

 2      PANEL A:                                  17      28

 3      Gabriel O'Malley
        Executive Deputy Superintendent,
 4        Consumer Protection and Financial
          Enforcement Division
 5      NYS Department of Financial Services

 6      Laura Campion
        Deputy General Counsel & Associate
 7        Commissioner
        NYS Department of Labor
 8
        PANEL B:                                  51      63
 9
        Stephanie J. Swenton
10      Chief of Criminal Enforcement and
          Financial Crimes Bureau
11      Shamiso Maswoswe
        Chief of Investor Protection Bureau
12      NYS Office of the Attorney General

13      PANEL C:                                  83      98

14      Alvin Bragg
        District Attorney
15      Manhattan, New York

16      Lee C. Kindlon
        District Attorney
17      Albany County

18      Alona Katz
        Unit Chief, Virtual Currency Unit
19      Brooklyn, New York, District
          Attorney's Office
20
        PANEL D:                                 110     120
21
        Richard Bouras
22      Manager, Investigations and
          Intelligence Solutions
23      Chainalysis Government Solutions

24      Ari Redbord
        Global Head of Policy
25      TRM Labs







                                                             3
 1      SPEAKERS (continued):                   PAGE  QUESTIONS

 2      PANEL E:                                 140     145

 3      Kristen McManus
        Director of Government Affairs
 4        and Advocacy
        AARP
 5                                               152     159
        PANEL F:
 6
        Mark Anderson
 7      Partner
        SBA GL, LLP
 8
        Charles Johnson
 9      NAACP New York State Political Action
          and Civic Engagement Chair
10      NAACP New York State Conference

11      Dr. Mark Bond
        Pastor
12      Citadel Cathedral, South Brooklyn, NY

13      PANEL G:                                 174     179

14      Scott Buchanan
        Executive Director
15      Student Loan Servicing Alliance

16      Winston Berkman-Breen                    185     195
        Legal Director
17      Protect Borrowers

18      Andy Morrison
        Associate Director
19      New Economy Project

20      Emma Kreyche                             207     217
        Director of Advocacy, Outreach,
21        and Education
        Worker Justice Center of New York
22
        Christopher Marlborough
23      Board Member, Co-Chair Legislative
          Advocacy Committee
24      National Employment Lawyers Associate,
          NY Affiliate
25







                                                             4
 1             SENATOR MYRIE:  Good morning, everyone.

 2             All right.  So, firstly, let me thank

 3      everyone for taking the time to be with us this very

 4      winter morning in Albany.

 5             I want to especially thank my colleague and

 6      chair of the Consumer Protection Committee,

 7      Senator Rachel May.

 8             As well as my colleagues, we are joined

 9      currently by Senator Dean Murray and the witnesses

10      who have taken the time to be with us this morning

11      at this hearing, a joint hearing between the Codes

12      and Consumer Protection Committee, regarding

13      white-collar crime and patterns that we are seeing

14      in fraud.

15             Now, we know that New Yorkers are in a

16      cost-of-living crisis.

17             The legislature has rightfully focused a lot

18      of energy on making life more affordable, and will

19      continue to do so.

20             But there is a dimension of this

21      affordability crisis that we do not talk about

22      enough, and that is:

23             The cost of being defrauded, the cost of

24      being overcharged, and having no recourse;

25             The cost of seemingly insurmountable student







                                                             5
 1      loan payments with no way out;

 2             The cost of losing your life savings to a

 3      crypto scheme;

 4             The cost of losing your home in an opaque

 5      foreclosure proceeding;

 6             The cost of having your wages stolen by an

 7      employer;

 8             To put it plainly, the cost of being scammed.

 9             Now, here in New York, we like to think we

10      know a scam when we see one.  But I want to take a

11      moment to focus on the student loan industry.

12             More than 2 million New Yorkers carry student

13      loan debt worth over $96 billion.  In New York City

14      alone, roughly, one in nine borrowers are

15      delinquent, and in The Bronx that number is closer

16      to one in seven.

17             So last December, as chair of the Codes

18      Committee, I sent detailed inquiry letters to

19      companies across the student loan servicing

20      industry, and I asked straightforward questions

21      about their practices serving New York borrowers.

22             I offered confidentiality protections.  Said

23      I would accept documents in phases.  I tried to be

24      as accommodating as a legislative body can be.

25             So let me talk to you about what we got back.







                                                             6
 1             I have four letters today, representing

 2      four companies that touch virtually every student

 3      loan in the state of New York.  And not one of them,

 4      not one, was willing to answer basic questions about

 5      how they treat the people whose loans they service.

 6             I'm going to start with Navient.

 7             At its peak, Navient, formerly Sally Mae, was

 8      the largest student loan servicer in the

 9      United States:  12 million borrowers and over

10      $300 billion in federal and student private loans.

11             The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

12      found that Navient steered 1.5 million borrowers

13      into costly forbearances instead of the affordable

14      repayment plans that they were entitled to.  That

15      added up to $4 billion in unnecessary interest to

16      their loan balances.

17             Navient was permanently banned from federal

18      student loan servicing and ordered to pay

19      $120 million.

20             Additionally, 39 state attorneys general, led

21      by our New York attorney general, reached a separate

22      $1.85 billion settlement.  And, currently, Navient

23      has 41,000 formal complaints in the CPFB [sic]

24      database.

25             That bureau's own enforcement director said







                                                             7
 1      Navient's practices resulted in millions of

 2      borrowers needlessly defaulting on their loans.

 3             So with that record, I wrote to them and

 4      asked for information related to their customer

 5      communication, their personnel training, compliance,

 6      and any remediation or coercive practices that they

 7      were trying to correct.

 8             And here's what they said, and I'm reading

 9      directly from the letter:

10             "Navient has largely exited the student loan

11      servicing business.  Navient outsourced the bulk of

12      its remaining services' functions to an organization

13      named MOHELA.  But we would be happy to answer any

14      further questions at the committee's convenience."

15             But they did not answer any of our questions,

16      and they declined to attend today's hearing.

17             A company permanently banned from its own

18      industry, with $2 billion in combined penalties, and

19      their answer to the New York State Senate is:  We've

20      left.  Ask someone else.

21             So we did.

22             I wrote to Earnest, Navient's private lending

23      arm that originates and services private student

24      loans.  It was acquired by Navient and operates as a

25      subsidiary of the same corporate family; the same







                                                             8
 1      parent company, the same leadership structure.

 2             And here is what Earnest said:

 3             "Earnest is an affiliate of Navient, and

 4      Earnest outsourced a substantial portion of its

 5      servicing functions to MOHELA."

 6             They also said, "We would be happy to answer

 7      any further questions at the committee's

 8      convenience."

 9             But they did not answer our questions, and

10      they declined to attend today's hearing.

11             And then there's Aidvantage, a subsidiary of

12      Maximus, one of the largest government contractors

13      in the country.

14             And when Navient was banned from federal

15      servicing, it was Maximus, doing business as

16      Aidvantage, that picked up the portfolio.  Together,

17      they directly managed student debt held by nearly

18      13 million borrowers and hold over $800 million in

19      department of education contracts.  Aidvantage also

20      runs the servicing platform for every federal

21      student loan borrower in default.

22             It is, by many measures, the largest student

23      loan company in the world, and its record?

24             The department of education withheld

25      $2 million from Aidvantage for failing to send







                                                             9
 1      timely billing statements to 758,000 borrowers.

 2      Investigations have documented evidence of sloppy

 3      servicing, unfair debt collection practices,

 4      unlawful wage garnishment, and improper seizure of

 5      tax refunds from borrowers in default.

 6             A federal judge held the Secretary of

 7      Education in contempt of court because Maximus

 8      failed to stop garnishing the wages whose loans the

 9      government had already agreed to cancel.

10             I sent Aidvantage the same inquiry I sent to

11      others, I invited them to testify at today's

12      hearing, and here was the response we received just

13      last week:

14             "Maximus Education, LLC, doing business as

15      Aidvantage, is a contractor on behalf of the federal

16      student aid for the servicing of department of

17      education-owned loans.  Inquiries related to

18      servicing federal student loans should be directed

19      to the department of education.

20             "Accordingly, we will not provide testimony

21      regarding student loans."

22             The largest student loan company in the

23      world -- 13 million borrowers, 800 million

24      government dollars in contracts -- and their answer

25      to the New York State Senate is:  "We will not







                                                             10
 1      provide testimony."  Talk to someone else about the

 2      very thing the federal government pays them to do.

 3             And we heard about MOHELA, the

 4      higher-education loan authority of the state of

 5      Missouri, that currently has the portfolios from

 6      Navient and Earnest.

 7             We wrote them the same letter, and their

 8      response to us was to speak to the trade

 9      association.  No documents, no point of contact, no

10      production plan.

11             8 million borrowers they have, $1.1 billion

12      in taxpayer money, and their answer is:  Talk to

13      someone else.

14             Navient says:  We have left.  Ask MOHELA.

15             Earnest says:  We're with Navient.  Ask

16      MOHELA.

17             Aidvantage says:  Talk to the federal

18      government.

19             MOHELA says:  Talk to our trade association.

20             No one is accountable, and the borrower is

21      the one that is trapped inside.

22             But here's why we're here today:  This is not

23      unique to the student loan industry.

24             This is how powerful entities get away with

25      getting over on regular people:







                                                             11
 1             Creating webs of affiliates and

 2      subcontractors and transfers.  Moving the portfolio

 3      before anyone can pin it down.  You point to the

 4      last company.  The last company points to the next

 5      company.  The next company points to the regulator.

 6             And the result is:  No one sits before the

 7      legislative body and answers for what happens to the

 8      people that they are supposed to serve.

 9             If a single New Yorker had been fined

10      billions of dollars, permanently banned from their

11      profession, sued by multiple federal agencies, and

12      found to have harmed millions of people, and then

13      refused to answer questions, we'd say they're

14      playing by a different set of rules and operating

15      outside of the law.

16             But when it's a large corporation or

17      financial institution or sophisticated digital

18      operation, we look the other way.

19             So I will close, so we can get to the hearing

20      testimony, with a date:  1986.

21             There are a lot of great things about that

22      year, including that it was the year I was born.

23      But it's also the last time that New York

24      significantly updated its white-collar crime

25      statutes.







                                                             12
 1             That is the legal framework we are working

 2      with today.

 3             Think about what the world looked like in

 4      1986:  No Internet.  No email.  No smartphones.  No

 5      online banking.  No algorithmic credit scoring.  No

 6      digital mortgage applications.  No student loans

 7      securitization market.  No service portfolios.  No

 8      cryptocurrency.  No blockchain.  No Zelle.  No

 9      Venmo.  No digital payment networks.

10             That is the world our fraud statutes were

11      built to serve 40 years ago.

12             Since then, our federal securities laws have

13      been updated, our banking laws have been updated,

14      our consumer protection laws have been updated, our

15      cybercrime statutes have been updated; but not our

16      core criminal fraud provisions, not the penal law.

17      Those are still stuck in 1986, and that is a choice.

18             Bad actors know this.  They've operated for

19      decades, knowing that our fraud statutes cannot

20      reach them.  That what they were doing may look bad,

21      may sound bad, may feel bad; but the law, as

22      written, has left them untouchable, while

23      New Yorkers, literally, and figuratively, have money

24      taken out of their pockets every day.

25             Every dollar extracted through deceptive







                                                             13
 1      servicing, every dollar inflated in a wrongful

 2      foreclosure judgment, every dollar stolen from a

 3      worker's paycheck, and every dollar misappropriated

 4      in a digital scheme is money taken from families

 5      already stretched to the breaking point.

 6             New Yorkers are getting scammed every single

 7      day.  It's time we do something about it.

 8             And with that, I will pass it to the chair of

 9      the Consumer Protection Committee to offer some

10      opening remarks, and then we will commence with the

11      hearing.

12             Thank you.

13             SENATOR MAY:  Well, thank you, Chair Myrie,

14      and thanks to everybody who is here.

15             I guess I should thank Senator Myrie for

16      making me feel really old --

17             [Laughter.]

18             -- because, 1986, I was already well into

19      adulthood.

20             But I do want to thank you for being a

21      partner in this hearing.

22             As chair of the Consumer Protection

23      Committee, we -- we have a lot of bills in our

24      committee about fraud and scams, and we are dealing

25      with this all the time.







                                                             14
 1             I was the chair of the Committee on Aging for

 2      four years.  And that's -- I know we will be hearing

 3      about elder fraud here, which is -- which is

 4      pervasive and growing.  And I find myself targeted

 5      by those fraudsters all the time as well.  And

 6      it's -- people are terrified.

 7             The thing about when you -- as Senator Myrie

 8      was saying, you know, people expect prices to go up,

 9      they expect things to be expensive.  But they don't

10      expect to be scammed, they don't expect to be

11      defrauded, and they don't expect just money to

12      disappear for no apparent reason.  And it's

13      terrifying, and people feel destabilized and they

14      feel helpless.

15             And those kinds of events, even if it's a

16      smaller amount of money than the money that they

17      might be struggling with because their utility bill

18      went up, if it is something where they feel like

19      they've been abused or mistreated or scammed, then

20      they get that much -- it's that much harder, it

21      feels like a much bigger hit.

22             I also want to say, Senator Myrie talked

23      about the student loan industry, and that's

24      something we're working on in my committee, is

25      trying to protect private student loan borrowers who







                                                             15
 1      have private student loans.

 2             But you mentioned that there had were

 3      41,000 formal complaints at the Consumer Financial

 4      Protection Board against Navient.

 5             One of the things that we're dealing with

 6      right now in New York State is that the federal

 7      government and the Trump Administration have made an

 8      all-out attack on the Consumer Financial Protection

 9      Board.  And the estimate is that that has cost

10      consumers $19 billion just in the last year alone

11      because of the -- essentially, the demise of that

12      board as a -- as an active participant in helping

13      consumers deal with these big corporations that are

14      not responsive.

15             If they're not going to be responsive to a --

16      you know, a state senator who chairs a powerful

17      committee, then they're not -- definitely not going

18      to be responsive to the individuals who have filed

19      those complaints.

20             And so it isn't an accident that we are

21      having to do this in 2026, when the federal

22      government has completely abdicated its role in

23      protecting consumers.

24             And so we need to do it here at this -- in

25      this state.







                                                             16
 1             And I'm really grateful to all of you who are

 2      here, to help us figure out the best ways to do

 3      that.

 4             And I won't take any more time, except just

 5      to say, I'm looking forward to hearing from all of

 6      you.  And we will definitely take what you have to

 7      say to us, and make sure that we're using it either

 8      to advance existing legislation or to improve the

 9      legislation that we've got on the books right now,

10      so that we can help the consumers of this state feel

11      like they are being protected even when the federal

12      government is not in their corner.

13             Thank you.

14             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, Chair May.

15             And we will commence with the hearing.

16             We are first starting with a number of

17      government panels.

18             In the first panel, if you can introduce

19      yourselves before you speak, you will each be

20      allotted five minutes, and then we will have some

21      questioning that I think will be around that time.

22      We're a little flexible today.

23             And so, I don't know amongst the lottery who

24      wanted to go first.

25             Okay.  And so we'll start with







                                                             17
 1      Mr. O'Malley.

 2             And thank you again for being here today, and

 3      thank you for your testimony.

 4             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Good morning, Chair Myrie,

 5      Chair May, and Senator Murray, and all other members

 6      of the New York Senate.

 7             The department of financial services

 8      appreciates the opportunity to submit testimony

 9      today.

10             My name is Gabriel O'Malley.

11             Since last March I have been the executive

12      deputy of DFS's Consumer Protection and Financial

13      Enforcement Division.  It's known as "CPFED"

14      colloquially, and so I may refer to us as that in

15      the testimony today.

16             The department regulates the activities

17      of approximately 3,000 banking, insurance, virtual

18      currency, and other financial institutions, with

19      assets totaling more than $9 trillion.  This

20      includes over 1200 depository and non-depository

21      financial service providers, and nearly

22      1800 insurance companies.

23             Last year, DFS provided over $350 million to

24      the State and New Yorkers through restitution to

25      consumers and health-care providers, penalties paid







                                                             18
 1      to the state general fund and DFS assessment revenue

 2      reappropriated to other state entities.

 3             The department's operating expenses,

 4      importantly, are assessed upon regulated entities

 5      and are not a cost to New York taxpayers.

 6             Under Governor Hochul's leadership, DFS has

 7      secured, roughly, 760 -- excuse me -- $765 million

 8      for consumers, addressed more than 200,000 consumer

 9      complaints, and issued 134 enforcement actions, and,

10      finally, collected more than $517 million in

11      enforcement penalties.

12             DFS's Consumer Protection and Financial

13      Enforcement Division, which I oversee, is comprised

14      of six units.

15             The attorneys and staff of CPFED's Civil

16      Investigation Unit, known as "CIU," investigate

17      civil financial fraud and violations of Consumer

18      Protection and Fair Lending laws, and violations of

19      the New York financial services law, banking law,

20      and insurance law, and regulations promulgated

21      thereunder.

22             Our CIU attorneys and staff conduct

23      investigations, they form legal conclusions, and,

24      ultimately, they resolve those investigations

25      generally in one of two ways:  Either through an







                                                             19
 1      agreed-upon consent order with an entity or

 2      individual, or through the filing of a statement of

 3      charges.

 4             Under Governor Hochul's leadership, CIU has

 5      taken robust action to address wrongdoing in

 6      New York.

 7             For example, DFS brought its first actions

 8      against cryptocurrency companies, including

 9      Robinhood Crypto, Coinbase, Block, and Gemini,

10      securing penalties and agreements to remediate, to

11      ensure compliance with state laws and regulations.

12             The department was also the first regulator

13      to take action concerning Binance, ordering Paxos to

14      cease minting Paxos-issued BUSD.

15             Notably, pursuant to a settlement with DFS in

16      2024, Gemini Trust Company returned more than

17      $2 billion worth of digital assets to consumers

18      after failing to protect them from alleged fraud by

19      an unregulated third party.

20             Gemini also paid $37 million in a penalty to

21      resolve that action, and to resolve their law

22      violations which threatened the safety and soundness

23      of the company.

24             In the past year alone, CIU's work has

25      resulted in, roughly, $90 million in penalties, with







                                                             20
 1      changes mandated to various aspects of businesses,

 2      including safety and soundness, anti-money

 3      laundering, consumer protection, virtual currency,

 4      and cybersecurity compliance.

 5             CPFED's Consumer Examinations Unit is

 6      responsible for conducting fair lending, compliance,

 7      and New York Community Reinvestment Act

 8      examinations; overseeing the Banking Development

 9      District Program; and registering and supervising

10      consumer credit reporting agencies; among other

11      work.

12             "CEU," as it's known internally, also houses

13      the department's Student Protection Unit, which is a

14      watchdog for New Yorkers.

15             The SPU licenses and examines student loan

16      servicers; importantly, mediates consumer

17      complaints; and provides clear information to

18      students and their families so they can make

19      informed financial choices around their education.

20             The Consumer Assistance Unit is the largest

21      of CPFED's units.  It investigates and mediates

22      complaints against regulated entities, as well as

23      complaints related to other entities.  It also

24      screens external appeal applications, manages the

25      independent dispute resolution process, and conducts







                                                             21
 1      outreach and education to consumers.

 2             To give you a sense of the magnitude of

 3      CAU's work, in 2025 alone, CAU received almost

 4      40,000 insurance-related complaints.  Its work

 5      processing and mediating those complaints resulted

 6      in the recovery of more than $121 million for

 7      New Yorkers and providers.  And, also, they

 8      processed more than 5300 non-mortgage-related

 9      complaints, which resulted in, roughly, $6 million

10      back to consumers.

11             A couple more points, and I'll be brief.

12             The Insurance Fraud Bureau, known as "IFP,"

13      is something that I know Acting Superintendent Asrow

14      talked about last week.  Its focus is on the

15      detection and investigation of insurance fraud, and

16      referring those matters for prosecution.

17             We received more than 51,000 reports of

18      suspected insurance fraud last year, mostly from our

19      regulated entities.  This resulted in almost

20      250 investigations, 169 arrests, and numerous

21      referrals to law enforcement agencies for

22      prosecution.

23             We have rebuilt and modernized IFP in the

24      last year.  We brought on new leadership in the top

25      two positions.  We have also increased staff by







                                                             22
 1      28 percent.  We're doubling down on technological

 2      advances as well, to make us more efficient and

 3      effective.  And we're also really focused on

 4      partnering with state police and other law

 5      enforcement agencies.

 6             Finally, we have an investigation and

 7      intelligence unit within CPFED.  They focus on

 8      potential violations of New York banks and banking

 9      law, but also the New York Penal Code and potential

10      crimes relating to mortgage fraud.  They work

11      closely with law enforcement agencies.

12             And, finally, we have the small but mighty

13      Holocaust Claims Processing Office, which I know you

14      all are aware of.  HCPO provides institutional

15      assistance to individuals seeking to recover lost

16      items due to Nazi persecution.

17             And I just have to note that, to date, HCPO

18      has secured more than $184 million in offers for

19      banks, insurance, and other losses; and has also

20      facilitated the return of 356 cultural objects, to

21      no cost to the recipients and to no cost to the

22      State of New York.

23             As reflected in the work that I have

24      outlined, the department is dedicated to ensuring

25      that New York insurance banking, virtual currency,







                                                             23
 1      and other non-bank financial services markets are

 2      fair and transparent from our competitors and,

 3      importantly, for consumers.

 4             I look forward to answering your questions

 5      today.

 6             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

 7             LAURA CAMPION:  Good morning.

 8             I would like to begin by acknowledging

 9      Chairs Myrie and May.  Thank you for inviting me to

10      testify today.

11             SENATOR MYRIE:  Apologies.  Technical

12      difficulties.

13             LAURA CAMPION:  Five minutes went faster than

14      I expected.

15             SENATOR MYRIE:  Yeah, you have -- that is --

16      you got more time than that.

17             Just give us one second.

18             LAURA CAMPION:  Absolutely.

19             SENATOR MYRIE:  Yeah, let's give her the

20      full.  Thank you very much.

21             Thank you for your patience.

22             LAURA CAMPION:  Not a problem.

23             Once more, from the top:  Good morning.

24             I would like to begin by acknowledging

25      Chairs Myrie and May.  Thank you for inviting me to







                                                             24
 1      testify today.

 2             Distinguished members of the committee, thank

 3      you for giving me this opportunity to discuss our

 4      efforts against wage theft at the department of

 5      labor.

 6             I am Laura Campion, deputy general counsel

 7      and associate commissioner of the department of

 8      labor.

 9             Wage theft negatively impacts the pockets of

10      New York's workers and the bottom lines of

11      businesses, creating a ripple effect that

12      reverberates throughout our entire economy.

13             Criminals who steal from the pockets of your

14      constituents must be pursued to the fullest extent

15      of the law.

16             At the department of labor, our

17      investigators, alongside our many partners in law

18      enforcement, labor, advocacy, and more, remain

19      focused on doing just that; utilizing every tool at

20      our disposal.

21             And we will not rest until stolen funds are

22      back where they belong; in the hands of hard-working

23      New Yorkers who rightfully earned them.

24             To that end, I am pleased to inform the

25      committee that 2025 was a landmark year in our fight







                                                             25
 1      against wage theft.

 2             Last year alone, our investigations recovered

 3      more than $35 million in wages and collected

 4      $2.2 million in penalties.

 5             And since 2017, the department has recovered

 6      and disbursed more than 243 million in stolen wages.

 7             We attribute part of our success last year to

 8      the enhancements to our enforcement capabilities by

 9      the governor, in partnership with the legislature.

10             By giving us the authority to issue warrants

11      and seize financial assets following unpaid wage

12      theft orders, we are better armed to go after bad

13      actors.

14             This ensures that workers are prioritized,

15      and emphasizes the message that wage theft will not

16      be tolerated here in New York State.

17             Again, we do not do this important work

18      alone.  There is power in partnership, and

19      collaboration has made it difficult for criminals to

20      hide.

21             Thanks to Governor Hochul's Wage Theft Task

22      Force, the department continues to work closely with

23      law enforcement partners, sharing strategies and

24      information to coordinate our efforts.

25             The ongoing multiagency effort includes the







                                                             26
 1      New York State Attorney General, district attorneys,

 2      the New York State Insurance Fund, and the

 3      New York City Department of Investigations.

 4             Together, along with our partners, we

 5      leverage criminal and civil laws to achieve justice

 6      for workers.

 7             In the spirit of partnership and

 8      transparency, we have given all New Yorkers,

 9      including the legislature, unprecedented access to

10      our work in this space through the Wage Theft

11      Investigations Dashboard.

12             This interactive online tool provides

13      comprehensive information on wage violation cases,

14      wages returned to workers, and penalties levied

15      against violators.

16             What this tool demonstrates, is the most

17      common types of wage theft include failing to pay

18      the minimum wage, failing to pay overtime, and

19      failing to adhere to the Spread of Hours law for

20      service workers.

21             This is why education is such an important

22      part of our work.  We know laws can be confusing for

23      some employers.  And in some cases of wage theft,

24      we've learned that employers want to comply.  They

25      didn't know that they were breaking the law.







                                                             27
 1             The department regularly communicates about

 2      wage theft, rights of workers, and the

 3      responsibilities of employers via social media,

 4      newsletters, through our business representatives,

 5      and more.  We work with employers, to educate them

 6      about equal pay and pay transparency laws, and

 7      proactively provide tools and information about fair

 8      and lawful treatment of employees.

 9             Education is key to attacking wage theft at

10      the root, preventing future violations before they

11      even occur.

12             Again, I want to emphasize that partnership

13      is key in fighting wage theft, and that includes

14      every working New Yorker.

15             Please encourage our constituents to look at

16      their paychecks.  And if anything looks concerning,

17      please report it to us immediately and we will look

18      into it.

19             In closing, I thank our partners, especially

20      in the legislature, for your continued commitment to

21      fighting wage theft, and for due diligence in making

22      sure that all working New Yorkers receive every cent

23      that they are owed.

24             Thank you.

25             SENATOR MYRIE:  Senator May.







                                                             28
 1             SENATOR MAY:  Yeah, thank you.

 2             Thank you both for your testimony.

 3             I guess, on that -- on the wage theft issue,

 4      I'm wondering right now, I assume that these are

 5      mostly hourly workers, and that we're talking about

 6      people at the lower end of the pay spectrum who

 7      don't have a lot of power in the whole process.

 8             And I'm just wondering if you're seeing

 9      changes, because so many people are afraid to come

10      forward, in -- given the kind of federal immigration

11      enforcement that we're seeing?  If you're seeing

12      changes in the kinds of complaints that you're

13      getting?

14             LAURA CAMPION:  I don't know, off the top of

15      my head, if we're seeing any specific changes or

16      trends.

17             But what I can say is, the department of

18      labor, anytime anyone comes forward to us, whether

19      it's, you know, with their name or anonymously, to

20      identify that there is wage theft potential, we look

21      into it.

22             You know, we go into a business.  We have the

23      ability to look at their books and records, and open

24      it up, because, oftentimes, it's not a single

25      individual who is being taken advantage of.







                                                             29
 1      There's, you know, multiple employees.

 2             And we take it very seriously, in terms of

 3      making sure that employees receive the wages that

 4      they are paid regardless of sort of anything else.

 5             SENATOR MAY:  Okay, thanks.

 6             And then, Mr. O'Malley, I guess I have a

 7      general question about whether your job has gotten

 8      harder without having a real federal partner in

 9      this, or if you were always completely independent

10      of the CFPB and other consumer protections at the

11      federal level?

12             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Well, I worked at the CFPB

13      for 12 years, and was there up until this time last

14      year, and, you know, loved my time there.

15             What I can say, on a personal note, is that

16      it's been really inspiring to land at DFS, and be a

17      part of an agency that is really focused on doing

18      right by both the economy, but also consumers.

19             And the purview of CPFED covers consumer

20      protection, and we've continued to be really active

21      there.

22             And that's been -- it's been wonderful, and

23      I feel lucky to have landed here.

24             As to what's happening in Washington on the

25      federal front, that's something -- not something







                                                             30
 1      that I can control or DFS can control.

 2             And so what we're doing, in large part, is

 3      what we've always done, which is focused on

 4      New York State laws and regulations and facts, some

 5      of which might result in, you know, federal

 6      violations over which we would have authority as

 7      well, and taking appropriate action, whether it be

 8      through supervisory matters requiring attention or,

 9      in many cases, at least in my group, through

10      enforcement action.

11             SENATOR MAY:  Okay, thanks.

12             So I don't want to complain, but looking at

13      the numbers that you gave, 200,000 complaints,

14      134 enforcement actions, that's less than a tenth of

15      1 percent.

16             Is that because they're just unenforceable?

17             Or, like, why would hundreds of thousands of

18      complaints not result in enforcement actions?

19             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Yeah, that's a great

20      question.

21             I would say, speaking at a general level, not

22      every complaint touches upon a law violation.  There

23      can be misunderstanding that doesn't rise to the

24      level of a law violation.

25             And that's why it's so key that we have CAU.







                                                             31
 1      In the bureau, before -- you know, when it was more

 2      active, had a consumer response group, because

 3      mediating those complaints actually gets companies

 4      to respond.  And, oftentimes, you can work out the

 5      difference and get money back to consumers.

 6             What we do do is monitor the complaint

 7      trends.

 8             We also have various other ways of assessing

 9      the market, including through our supervisory

10      activity, to understand trends, and try to take

11      action in those places where we're seeing

12      significant trends that are either harming consumers

13      or are, for example, in the cybersecurity world.  If

14      there's a particular type of trend that's leading to

15      a breach, that's something that we would want to

16      dedicate our resources to because we do have finite

17      resources.

18             So I would say the large number of complaints

19      indicates that there are problems.

20             I do think, CAU, our assistance group, is

21      doing a wonderful job, getting almost $130 million

22      back to folks.

23             For the larger, more systemic issues, we use

24      the enforcement tool.

25             SENATOR MAY:  And do you track what most of







                                                             32
 1      the complaints are about?  Do you have a database

 2      that says, you know, most people are complaining

 3      about this kind of issue?  Or --

 4             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Yeah, well, broadly

 5      speaking, most people are complaining about

 6      insurance.  And within those complaints there are

 7      certain, you know, aspects of concern -- insurance

 8      that folks are complaining about.

 9             And our CAU unit passes that information on

10      to our insurance division which oversees insurers

11      and producers.  And that's used to inform areas of

12      exploration and examinations.

13             SENATOR MAY:  And so I had one other

14      question that was also about the -- again, you had

15      40,000 complaints just in CAU.

16             I'm just wondering, like, it would be really

17      helpful for us if you were keeping kind of more

18      granular data about what specific problems people

19      are complaining about, so that we -- you know, if

20      there are ways that we can intervene, you know, we

21      would know what are the most important problems out

22      there.

23             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Sure.

24             SENATOR MAY:  We hear from constituents, but

25      you hear a much more comprehensive list of what the







                                                             33
 1      issues are.

 2             So I'm just-- do you keep data?

 3             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  We do.

 4             And I can certainly take that back, and we

 5      can get back to you with some more specific trend

 6      lines.

 7             As I said, the top line is, the vast majority

 8      of complaints are, insurance-related.

 9             And as you all are aware, we oversee the

10      external appeals process, which includes those

11      dramatic decisions, where there's a decision by an

12      insurance company to deny coverage in an emergency

13      moment.

14             And a consumer is able then to come to us and

15      have a decision made in a very short order, 24 to

16      72 hours, whether the insurance company has to

17      actually pay.

18             And that is an essential function that we do,

19      and also takes up, of course, a lot of time --

20             SENATOR MAY:  Yeah.

21             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  -- and is very important,

22      because it's time-sensitive in --

23             SENATOR MAY:  Are we talking medical

24      insurance?

25             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Yes.







                                                             34
 1             SENATOR MAY:  Car insurance?

 2             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Yes.

 3             SENATOR MAY:  Homeowners insurance?

 4             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Medical, yes.

 5             SENATOR MAY:  Just medical insurance.

 6             Okay.  That's really helpful.

 7             Thank you very much.

 8             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, Senator May.

 9             Senator Murray.

10             SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you, Chairman.

11             And thank you both for being here.

12             I would like to start with Mr. O'Malley.

13             Just, I want to put it on the radar, we were

14      talking off line about this; that I'm glad a lot of

15      the focus is on insurance.

16             But we have a problem on Long Island right

17      now in regards to mortgages and escrow funds being

18      stolen, to the point of -- let me see -- as far as

19      the number of claims.

20             So we have the New York State Lawyers Fund

21      for Client Protection, and that's supposed to

22      reimburse anyone that has problems.

23             80 percent -- 86 percent of those claims paid

24      in 2024 involved real estate escrow funds being

25      stolen.







                                                             35
 1             We're at a point now where they're capping

 2      the claims.  It's, I think, $400,000, capping how

 3      much you can get.

 4             Says only 66 percent of the valid claims are

 5      fully reimbursed right now, because we're running

 6      out of money because it's happening so much.

 7             So I'm hoping we can put a focus on that.

 8      And we'd be more than happy -- I know I've talked to

 9      my colleagues.  We'd be more than happy to work

10      together on finding some solutions.  But I want to

11      put that on the radar.

12             Is that a focus of yours now, or...?

13             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Well, first, I appreciate

14      you raising this.  And I would like to hear more

15      outside of this hearing about specific instances and

16      particular attorneys or law firms.  And that's

17      something I certainly would take back and consider

18      further.

19             More generally, I mean, that kind of

20      fraudulent interaction between either company or

21      agent and consumer is something that we're focused

22      on generally, of course, and especially where

23      there's a trend -- a burgeoning trend, and it's

24      causing specific harm to consumers.

25             So it's something I would certainly like to







                                                             36
 1      hear more about.

 2             SENATOR MURRAY:  Okay, great, great, and

 3      we'll do that.

 4             Ms. Campion, two quick issues.

 5             One:  I noticed, when you were going through

 6      the list of some of the things, you had mentioned

 7      minimum wage, and things list -- regarding wage

 8      theft.  But I didn't hear prevailing wage

 9      violations.

10             We have a lot of the labor unions on

11      Long Island who are saying, Look, you've got these

12      guys that are coming in.  They're bidding on

13      projects.  They're supposed to be paying prevailing

14      wage, and their bid says they are.

15             But in reality, when you talk to some of the

16      workers, they're playing games, and they're not

17      getting it.

18             But there doesn't seem to be a lot of

19      investigation into this.

20             Is that a focus of yours, and what can we do

21      to step it up?

22             LAURA CAMPION:  Our Bureau of Public Work and

23      Prevailing Wage, you know, works extremely hard to

24      investigate these types of complaints and issues

25      that are raised.  And it's certainly something our







                                                             37
 1      agency is focusing on, and that we are doing a lot

 2      to increase in space -- or, increase our efforts in

 3      that space.

 4             I think over the last two years, we've had

 5      the certified payroll system start.  We've had the

 6      contractor registry system go online.  And those are

 7      efforts that we've been making alongside, you know,

 8      the legislature and the governor, to make sure that

 9      people are aware, have information, that there's

10      transparency, and that we're getting the information

11      we need to complete investigations.

12             SENATOR MURRAY:  Do have you enough people to

13      do the job in this area?

14             LAURA CAMPION:  That's not something that

15      I would know off the top of my head or be able to

16      speak to specifically.  But it's something we can

17      look into and get back to you.

18             SENATOR MURRAY:  I would appreciate that.

19             And then, finally, the -- Part 191 of labor

20      law, frequency of pay, manual labor, and there is so

21      much confusion.

22             And, in fact, we've got some small businesses

23      now, unfortunately, going out of business because

24      they've been sued, not knowing they even violated.

25             Most people don't know, most business owners







                                                             38
 1      don't know, that, under Part 191, if a position is

 2      considered manual labor, they must be paid weekly;

 3      not bi-weekly, but weekly.

 4             There have been cases where even the

 5      department of labor has had inspectors going into a

 6      business, looking at their books.  They didn't even

 7      notice it.  It was on something else they were

 8      looking at.  Didn't call anybody's attention to it,

 9      and later the company got sued.

10             The Governor took steps to limit and protect

11      the businesses a bit, and I applaud that; however,

12      we haven't fixed the problem.

13             Can we please, please, get a clear definition

14      of "manual labor"?

15             Now, in our bail reform laws, we go down and

16      there's a checklist of crimes.

17             We can do the same when it comes to positions

18      that would qualify for manual labor.  That would

19      remove all the confusion and protect both the

20      businesses and the workers.

21             So I'm begging, can we please have the

22      Commissioner, because that's who needs to do this,

23      the Commissioner needs to clearly identify what

24      manual labor -- what qualifies as "manual labor"?

25             So if could you take that back to the







                                                             39
 1      Commissioner, please.  We need that help.  Small

 2      business is really getting hurt.

 3             LAURA CAMPION:  Understood.

 4             SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you.

 5             SENATOR MYRIE:  Senator May for a second

 6      round.

 7             SENATOR MAY:  Oh, sorry.

 8             For Mr. O'Malley.

 9             So in my role in consumer protection,

10      I mostly deal with the attorney general's office.

11      And they have complaints page on their website where

12      people can file issues.

13             Do you have the same -- do you have a

14      parallel thing?  And do you work together with the

15      attorney general's office if a complaint -- where is

16      the overlap?  I guess that's the question, because

17      it feels like you're doing similar things.

18             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Excuse me.

19             Sure.

20             We have our own complaints database.  And if

21      you type in "DFS" and "complaint" into Google, it

22      will pop up immediately.  It's easy to find on our

23      website, and you can click a button and submit a

24      complaint.

25             Separately, there is another network that







                                                             40
 1      attorneys generals and banking regulators can use

 2      for other complaints.

 3             And then, finally, there's the CFPB complaint

 4      network, which is the national database, that

 5      focuses on financial products and services.

 6             So there are various databases.  We have

 7      access to all of them, and we use all of them in

 8      setting priorities.

 9             SENATOR MAY:  And what should a consumer do

10      who's got a problem?

11             Should they come to you first?

12             Should they go to the attorney general's

13      office first?

14             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  That's a great question.

15             So if an entity is a regulated entity, the

16      consumer should certainly come to us, and for a

17      couple of reasons.

18             One:  As I said, our CAU office is very

19      effective in mediating complaints and getting money

20      back to consumers.

21             Two:  Allowing us, as the regulator, to get

22      complaints allows to us draw out trends and

23      intelligently focus our resources, going forward.

24             One never wants to make work for a consumer.

25      But filing complaints with the attorney general's







                                                             41
 1      office also has the same broad benefits for the AG,

 2      and ultimate knock-on effects for our ability to

 3      catalog trends, going forward.

 4             So I don't want to ask too much of any one

 5      person, but would welcome complaints to us on any

 6      regulated entity.

 7             SENATOR MAY:  And then I know the department

 8      of state also has an office that is charged with

 9      consumer protection.

10             Do you all work together; is there a

11      coordination that goes on?

12             And is there joint messaging that happens?

13             Because that's one of their things, is to put

14      messages out.

15             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Yeah, there's a quarterly

16      consumer protection roundtable that I attend in

17      New York City, that's not only run and chaired by

18      the department of worker and consumer protection,

19      the AG is present there.  Other government agencies

20      are present there.  Advocates are present there.

21             And we hear from them about trends that are

22      happening, and talk through those trends, and hear

23      the latest updates on case decisions.

24             SENATOR MAY:  Okay.  So I'm glad all of you

25      are doing this work.  But I feel very strongly that







                                                             42
 1      there probably should be a one-stop shop for

 2      consumers, where, you know, they can put their --

 3      like, you know, one website or one number that they

 4      go to, and it will get directed to the right agency;

 5      if it's more appropriate in the AG's office or more

 6      appropriate in yours.  That would make a lot more

 7      sense than having parallel processes that they have

 8      to navigate.

 9             So I hope we can talk about that in the

10      future.

11             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Sure.

12             SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.

13             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, Senator May.

14             I have questions for both of you.

15             I'll start with Ms. Campion, and

16      Senator Murray began to touch on this.  But I'm

17      hoping you can expound a little bit.

18             As I understand it, there are, roughly,

19      235 wage enforcement staff at DOL, responsible for

20      covering all of the workers and employers in the

21      state.

22             And I'm hoping you can talk to us about what

23      that caseload looks like, how that operates in

24      practice.

25             This is not a budget hearing.  But we are in







                                                             43
 1      the midst of the budget, where the legislature makes

 2      decisions around where resources are allocated.

 3             So hoping to gain some more insight into how

 4      many resources DOL has now currently to enforce wage

 5      theft -- or, the prevention of wage theft, rather;

 6      and whether there might be room for more resources

 7      to help you accomplish that.

 8             LAURA CAMPION:  Thank you.

 9             I don't have any sort of specific numbers,

10      and I wouldn't be able to confirm any numbers, if

11      the number of staffing you identified is specific to

12      our Labor Standards Unit or includes our public work

13      and prevailing wage investigators as well.

14             But I can certainly bring some of that back

15      and have us follow up.

16             What I will say is that, you know, we do

17      everything that we can, and work extremely hard with

18      the resources that we have.  I think our

19      commissioner had her budget testimony last week --

20      I think it was only last week.

21             It's been a long week.

22             And, you know, I think she generally will say

23      that we're never going to say no to resources.  But

24      we also recognize that there's a lot of work that

25      has to get done amongst all of the state agencies; a







                                                             44
 1      lot of important work from my colleagues at DFS,

 2      from the other state agencies that have been

 3      mentioned today.

 4             And we'll continue to work hard and use our

 5      resources as effectively as we can.

 6             SENATOR MYRIE:  And thank you for that.

 7             Are there any high-risk industries for wage

 8      theft or particular patterns that you have seen

 9      emerge, whether it be on the income band or whether

10      it is the type of industry?

11             LAURA CAMPION:  Sure.

12             I know, off the top of my head, the service

13      industries are, you know, generally a challenge.

14             And you can go on to our -- the dashboard

15      that I mentioned in my remarks, and narrow to see

16      things by different industries and whatnot.

17             I wouldn't be able to give you a full

18      accounting off the top of my head.  But we can

19      certainly follow up with some more specifics.

20             SENATOR MYRIE:  Great.  Thank you.

21             I think that would be helpful for the

22      committees, certainly as we're trying to craft

23      prevention efforts by statute, to see if there are

24      particular industries that need some tailored focus,

25      and who are more susceptible to taking advantage of







                                                             45
 1      workers.

 2             And to Mr. O'Malley, I'm going to turn the

 3      focus a little bit to virtual currency.

 4             And the conversation around the market

 5      structure and all of the things happening on the

 6      federal level is complicated and fraught, like many

 7      things, with politics.

 8             But here in the state, I think the DFS has

 9      been on the forefront from many years ago, and under

10      previous and current leadership, in trying to

11      establish some regulatory framework, to allow for

12      both accountability in the industry, but also to

13      have the market continue to do what the market does.

14             You issued last November -- I think you were

15      already there, but maybe not -- okay, last

16      September, rather, guidance on blockchain analysis

17      for entities.

18             Can you talk to me, one, about how that has

19      gone from a compliance side?

20             And, also, what challenges remain in folks

21      being able to comply with doing this type of

22      analysis and safety, and what -- where there might

23      be room for improvement?

24             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Sure.  Thank you.

25             So on the "how is it going?" analysis front,







                                                             46
 1      the Research and Innovation Division houses a

 2      virtual currency unit that performs examinations of

 3      all of our licensees on a periodic basis.

 4             I'm not able to comment on specific

 5      examination findings.

 6             But what I can say is very important to DFS

 7      in assessing current licensees and other -- and

 8      applicants is redeemability of assets.

 9             So if a consumer wants to get his or her

10      assets back, are they able to do so immediately; or,

11      if not so, in a timely manner?  And, also, the

12      ability to freeze funds.

13             And that really is important for especially

14      criminal and civil actions, where, once you find out

15      something has happened, the wheels of justice

16      sometimes move slowly for the ultimate result.  But

17      it's important to be able to move quickly to freeze

18      funds.

19             And so that's an important aspect of what we

20      look at when we're reviewing various companies.

21             SENATOR MYRIE:  And I know you can't comment

22      on specific examinations, and whether or not they

23      may or may not be investigations.

24             Can you say, more broadly, whether you have

25      found, specifically for bit licensees, whether there







                                                             47
 1      has been compliance on this guidance?

 2             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  I'm going to have to come

 3      back to you on that, and I'm happy to provide more

 4      information.  But I want to make sure that what

 5      I provide you is correct.

 6             So I'll pause on that and come back to you on

 7      it.

 8             SENATOR MYRIE:  Okay, and I appreciate it.

 9             I'm certainly not attempting to shame any

10      particular actor.  The hope is, you know, whether we

11      need to go further than regulatory, and whether we

12      should consider statutory requirements.  And it

13      would be helpful to know, given you guys's proximity

14      to the industry, to see what may be needed.

15             On the student loan front, and you spent a

16      significant amount of your testimony, and certainly

17      given your position in DFS, talking about the work

18      that is done on that front.

19             Can you -- for the everyday New Yorker who

20      does not tune in at 10 a.m. in the morning on

21      Tuesday to a public protection and consumer

22      protection hearing, if I'm a student loan borrower,

23      and right now I am, you know, paying, and I'm --

24      I feel overburdened or I feel like something is

25      awry, what do I do?







                                                             48
 1             And how would DFS be helpful in that instance

 2      where I feel like, my servicer, I can't reach them

 3      or I feel like I'm being overcharged, and this is

 4      someone that is under regulation by DFS?

 5             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Sure.

 6             Well, first of all, just to harken back to

 7      something you said at the outset, about folks being

 8      held captive in relationships and being potentially

 9      exploited.

10             I think the servicing relationship is an

11      example of how that can happen, because consumers

12      don't choose their servicers, in most instances,

13      relating to mortgages or their student loans.

14             And so you don't have the equality of

15      relationship, where you're able to make an informed

16      choice, after the transaction happens, to move to

17      another provider the way you would, for example,

18      with a cell phone.

19             And so servicing is really an area where

20      folks are held captive by whoever it is that's

21      servicing the loans.

22             Our SPU unit does public outreach.

23             I believe in the budget negotiations there

24      are some discussions about getting us more

25      resources; and also more resources for EDCAP which







                                                             49
 1      does a fantastic job in communicating with

 2      consumers.

 3             Candidly, now, there have been so many

 4      changes on the federal front, that it is confusing

 5      for folks about what their rights are for federal

 6      student loans and what the best decision is for them

 7      to make.

 8             One thing that we have seen is that, as a

 9      result of the One Big Beautiful Act Bill, there have

10      been and will be changes to federal student lending.

11      And that might, I would say, is likely to push some

12      number of consumers into private student loans, to

13      bridge the gap in the amount of money that they need

14      to get for their education and what they can

15      actually get through federal loans.

16             The Governor has highlighted her interest in

17      ensuring that consumers understand their rights when

18      they're refinancing federal loans into private

19      student loans, because, as I think you're alluding

20      to, under the federal loan structure, there are

21      certain benefits that consumers can take advantage

22      of.  Income-driven repayment plan is one.  The

23      public student loan forgiveness plan is another.

24             But once you consolidate those loans and turn

25      them private, that's an irrevocable act, and you may







                                                             50
 1      lose certain rights.  And it's particularly

 2      confusing now because the landscape is in flux on

 3      the federal front.

 4             And so the Governor has rightly proposed

 5      requiring private student loan lenders to give

 6      consumers an understanding of what rights they might

 7      be losing if they do consolidate loans into private

 8      loans.

 9             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

10             And my last question, and thank you for your

11      patience again:  What is DFS's current understanding

12      of your authority as it relates to prediction market

13      platforms, if any?

14             I know this is a newer thing, and we're all

15      trying to respond and figure things out.

16             And I'm wondering if you have thoughts on

17      whether there should be some space for conversation?

18             These are -- these markets -- and this is

19      something Chair May has also been looking into --

20      that are not inherently financial, but there are

21      many financial transactions that end up taking

22      place.

23             And wondering if DFS has any thoughts on

24      that?

25             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Well, I'm aware it's a







                                                             51
 1      complex issue, and it presents some really fraught

 2      issues.

 3             The CFTC has historically had authority over

 4      futures contracts, and there has been some

 5      litigation over whether or not State action is

 6      preempted.  I'm aware of that.

 7             I would say, ultimately, whether or not

 8      New York is going to take some form of action in

 9      connection with prediction markets is a really

10      important policy decision that the Governor and the

11      legislature will have to work through.

12             And we can provide technical advice, given

13      our understanding of the various markets that we

14      regulate.

15             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

16             There are no further questions.

17             Thank you both for taking the time to testify

18      today.

19             GABRIEL O'MALLEY:  Thank you.  Appreciate it

20      very much.

21             LAURA CAMPION:  Yes, thank you.

22             SENATOR MYRIE:  Okay.  We are next going to

23      hear from the office of the attorney general.

24             Good morning, and thank you for testifying

25      today.  Take it away when you're ready.







                                                             52
 1             STEPHANIE J. SWENTON:  Good morning,

 2      Chairs Myrie and May, Senator Murray.

 3             Thank you for convening this important

 4      hearing, and for giving our office, the attorney

 5      general's office, an opportunity to share our

 6      experiences, feedback, and insight.

 7             Attorney General James continues to

 8      appreciate the strong and constructive relationship

 9      between our office and the legislature.  And we

10      appreciate your consideration of legislative reforms

11      that will enable prosecutors to more effectively

12      combat white-collar crime schemes in New York State.

13             My name is Stephanie Swenton, and I have

14      served as chief of the attorney general's Criminal

15      Enforcement and Financial Crimes Bureau for over

16      eight years, and as a criminal prosecutor in

17      New York State for over 25 years.

18             I am joined by my colleague,

19      Shamiso Maswoswe, who serves as chief of the

20      attorney general's Investor Protection Bureau.

21             SHAMISO MASWOSWE:  I began my career as

22      prosecutor 10 years ago with the Department of

23      Justice Criminal Division, and joined OAG 7 years

24      ago, and began serving as chief of IPB for the last

25      4 years, where I help lead our office's securities







                                                             53
 1      and commodities investigations, enforcement actions,

 2      and litigations.

 3             STEPHANIE J. SWENTON:  The attorney general's

 4      Financial Crimes Bureau conducts investigations and

 5      prosecutions of complex financial fraud schemes

 6      across the state, including criminal securities

 7      fraud prosecutions, and supplements the valuable

 8      work done by the 62 county district attorneys in

 9      this space.

10             The attorney general's Public Integrity

11      Bureau, Medicaid Fraud Control Unit, and Labor

12      Bureau are also active in the white-collar space,

13      prosecuting crimes based either on statutory grants

14      of authority or referrals from state executive

15      agencies.

16             Prosecution of white-collar crime cases is

17      very time-consuming.  It's document-intensive, and

18      it involves testimony from dozens of witnesses.

19             However, a few simple reforms would greatly

20      enhance our ability to prosecute white-collar

21      crimes.

22             The first is simplifying the introduction of

23      business records in the grand jury.

24             Under New York law, with few exceptions, a

25      witness must testify in person in the grand jury to







                                                             54
 1      admit testimony or even documentary evidence.

 2             This means that a witness who has no other

 3      relevant testimony to offer must travel to the grand

 4      jury merely to be asked a few questions to show that

 5      a document is part of their business records.

 6             In most states and federal districts, this

 7      type of personal appearance by a records custodian

 8      is not required in the grand jury, nor even often at

 9      trial.

10             The New York Legislature has already

11      recognized an exception for certain phone and

12      banking records, which can be introduced by

13      certification in the grand jury.  These

14      certifications safeguard the reliability of the

15      records by requiring a business representative to

16      sign a written statement under oath, attesting to

17      their authenticity.

18             If this already-accepted certification

19      process were extended to all business records, it

20      would greatly streamline our grand jury process.

21             The second proposed reform to grand jury

22      practice is improving victim access to grand jury.

23             Large-scale fraud schemes typically target

24      victims across the state and across the country,

25      particularly now in the digital era, as well as







                                                             55
 1      vulnerable victims such as the elderly.

 2             Permitting witnesses who reside more than

 3      100 miles from the grand jury, or whose mobility

 4      issues substantially impair their ability to appear

 5      in person before a grand jury, to instead testify by

 6      simultaneous video testimony would enhance our

 7      ability to prosecute white-collar crimes.

 8             Such live videotaped testimony would still

 9      maintain the integrity of the proceedings because

10      jurors would have the ability to observe the

11      witness, ask questions, and a certified recording

12      would be retained for future review.

13             The third reform is adding increased felony

14      levels to the "scheme to defraud" statute.

15             Most areas of the New York State Penal Law

16      hold the most egregious offenders accountable by

17      establishing increase in felony levels based on the

18      scope of the crime.  For example, the larceny

19      statutes, someone who steals less than $1,000 is

20      guilty of a misdemeanor; more than $1,000, an

21      E felony; and so forth, with a theft of over

22      $1,000,000 constituting a B felony.

23             In New York, however, thefts must be charged

24      separately as to each victim.  This means that a

25      stock broker who steals $1.1 million from a single







                                                             56
 1      wealthy client can be held accountable on a Class B

 2      felony.  However, if a stock broker steals

 3      $1.1 million by taking $1,000 each from 1,100

 4      lower-income investors, that conduct is only

 5      punishable in New York as a series of A misdemeanors

 6      and an E felony scheme to defraud.

 7             An example of this is the attorney general's

 8      recent indictment of a tax preparer in

 9      Madison County who was charged with operating a

10      massive Ponzi scheme over three decades, by which he

11      stole over $50 million from 988 investors.

12             Because he did not steal more than $1,000,000

13      from any one of those investors, the top counts

14      charged are only C felonies.

15             Adding increased felony levels to the

16      "scheme to defraud" statute would allow us to hold

17      the most egregious offenders accountable, and ensure

18      that offenders who target low- and middle-income

19      victims are equally accountable as those who target

20      wealthy New Yorkers.

21             Lastly, I would like to note the exceptional

22      partnership that the attorney general has had with

23      the legislature, particularly Senator Myrie in

24      combating deed theft.

25             Preventing deed theft has long been a







                                                             57
 1      priority of Attorney General James.

 2             The attorney general's office created a

 3      dedicated Real Estate Enforcement Unit to

 4      investigate and prosecute deed theft schemes, and

 5      since 2019, has chaired the Deed Theft Fraud Task

 6      Force.

 7             The attorney general remains deeply committed

 8      to rooting out deed theft in all of its forms, and

 9      we look forwarded to continuing to work with the

10      legislature to develop criminal and civil tools to

11      guard against these crimes.

12             Thank you again for the opportunity to share

13      input on this important topic.

14             And you will next hear testimony from my

15      colleague Shamiso.

16             SHAMISO MASWOSWE:  As part of our role as the

17      a state's chief law enforcement officer, the OAG is

18      a state securities and commodities regulator.

19             Through IPB, the OAG investigates and brings

20      enforcement actions against those who offer or sell

21      securities or commodities, including

22      cryptocurrencies, fraudulently or without

23      registration.

24             The OAG has regulated securities and

25      commodities for over a century, and has been on the







                                                             58
 1      crypto beat for a decade.

 2             Many of the fraudulent investment secure --

 3      investment schemes that our office prosecutes today

 4      involved -- involve cryptocurrencies.

 5             As some of you know, Senator Myrie hosted a

 6      roundtable on white-collar crime, which our office

 7      attended, along with several DAs, the department of

 8      financial services, and the New York State Police.

 9             It was striking how many offices reported the

10      way that traditional financial crimes and other

11      forms of criminal conduct were generated or

12      facilitated using crypto.

13             Whether a scheme to defraud investors through

14      a crypto-based investment scam or using crypto to

15      hide money stolen through an elder fraud scam, it is

16      impossible to ignore crypto's connection to criminal

17      conduct, including white-collar crime.

18             This growth in crypto-related crime makes

19      sense.

20             When criminals want to lie, cheat, and steal,

21      they often choose cryptocurrency for a few reasons.

22             When they break the law, it's good to be

23      anonymous.

24             Second:  In crypto, there is no bank or

25      centralized authority that's tasked with identifying







                                                             59
 1      suspicious transactions or wallets or for rooting

 2      out fraud before it happens, or even detecting it

 3      afterwards.

 4             And unlike in traditional securities

 5      industry, no one is tasked with the visibilty -- no

 6      one has visibilty into the trading activity

 7      occurring across the marketplace.

 8             And, third:  In crypto, there's, largely, no

 9      do-overs on the blockchain.

10             Chainalysis, an -- a blockchain analytics

11      firm, who I understand you'll be hearing from a bit

12      later, conservatively reports that crimes involving

13      cryptocurrency back in 2020 involved crypto in the

14      amount of about 11 billion.  It more than doubled

15      the next year to 26.5 billion, and reached an

16      all-time high in 2022, at 54.3 billion.  In 2024, it

17      estimates that it will reach -- that it reached

18      $51.3 billion.

19             In January of this year, our office, along

20      with several local district attorneys' offices from

21      across the state, joined District Attorney Bragg in

22      a letter to Senator Schumer, Gillibrand, and Woerner

23      about the two largest stablecoin issuers, Circle and

24      Tether, and their failures to cooperate with law

25      enforcement to stop fraud, and return assets to







                                                             60
 1      victims.

 2             Everyone agrees that this is a problem.

 3             Congress has begun to draft legislation to

 4      resolve it.  But it expressly does not include a

 5      requirement that digital asset service providers,

 6      like Circle and Tether, cooperate with state and

 7      local law enforcement, like OAG and local district

 8      attorneys' offices, which is why your help is

 9      needed.

10             We would like to bring your attention to

11      four ways that crypto entities facilitate crime,

12      which we believe could be addressed through

13      legislation.

14             First:  Not all crypto companies comply with

15      law enforcement requests to freeze assets

16      temporarily, pending court action.

17             At least one stablecoin issuer, Circle,

18      routinely refuses administrative requests to

19      temporarily freeze assets that would allow -- that

20      law enforcement believes were involved in fraudulent

21      conduct.  Instead, Circle directs law enforcement to

22      go to court and secure a court order even if there

23      may not be time to do so.

24             Second:  Even once a court order is obtained,

25      requiring that assets be frozen, some cryptocurrency







                                                             61
 1      firms will not comply with those orders or will

 2      unreasonably delay compliance.

 3             In one instance, our office and the

 4      Queens District Attorney's Office asked Circle to

 5      voluntarily freeze assets.  And when we were told

 6      no, and to get a judicial court order, we did so,

 7      and Circle was directed to freeze those assets.  But

 8      it took the company three days to do so, which

 9      allowed the crypto to be transferred out and

10      converted.

11             OAG has also been informed that platforms,

12      such as OKX and Binance, will not honor court orders

13      obtained by victims directly unless law enforcement

14      is involved or unless victims choose to indemnify

15      these companies.

16             Third:  Even in the face of a court order,

17      requiring cryptocurrency firms to return the

18      proceeds of fraud, some entities have refused orders

19      to return these ill-gotten gains, failed to

20      cooperate with law enforcement to secure those

21      orders, or declined to cooperate unless law

22      enforcement jumps through numerous difficult and

23      unreasonable hoops.

24             The status quo is untenable and leaves law

25      enforcement, particularly state and local law







                                                             62
 1      enforcement, and the victims of crypto schemes, at

 2      the mercy of these entities who derive immense

 3      financial benefit from underregulation and the

 4      opacity of the crypto industry.

 5             Even those crypto law firms -- even those

 6      crypto firms that have provided voluntary compliance

 7      in the past can, at any moment, decide to stop

 8      cooperating with law enforcement to freeze and seize

 9      defrauded crypto assets.

10             Finally, while the anonymity associated with

11      stablecoins is considered one of its prime benefits

12      for users -- it is in fact a feature, not a bug --

13      the opacity still applies even when law enforcement

14      is trying to investigate criminal conduct.

15             This seems difficult to justify when it's

16      clear that crypto has become a prime vector to

17      enable and facilitate criminal conduct.

18             OAG thanks the committees and Chairs Myrie

19      and May for providing the opportunity to share input

20      on this important topic.

21             We look forward to continuing to work

22      together, moving forward to address these issues,

23      and are now able to answer any questions that you

24      might have.

25      ///







                                                             63
 1             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you both.

 2             Senator May.

 3             SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.

 4             So let me start with you and talk about

 5      crypto, because one of the things we heard from

 6      Ms. Swenton is that there are very different

 7      penalties, depending on the amount of money

 8      concerned.

 9             But, with crypto, the actual valuation of the

10      stablecoin fluctuates.

11             Does it even make sense to have monetary

12      levels on penalties, or, you know, assign penalties

13      according to the amount of money that is being

14      defrauded if you're in the crypto world?

15             Or how do you deal with that?

16             SHAMISO MASWOSWE:  So IPB is a civil

17      enforcement.  And so, for us, our goal is always to

18      just fully return assets to the victims, and then,

19      also, to pursue penalties and disgorgement where we

20      can.

21             The beauty of stablecoin, or the supposed

22      beauty of stablecoin, is that the value of

23      stablecoin isn't supposed to fluctuate.  Stablecoins

24      are supposed to be pegged one-to-one with fiat

25      currency, so that one stablecoin is supposed to







                                                             64
 1      equal one dollar.

 2             And that's why it's often the tool of choice

 3      and the currency of choice for criminals because

 4      they don't like that other cryptocurrencies will

 5      fluctuate so much in value.

 6             So, for instance, on last Friday, Bitcoin was

 7      valued at $65.  But five months ago it was at

 8      $126 -- at an all-time high of $126.

 9             And so, often, it will go into stablecoin.

10             So because it changes value so often, and

11      many of the different tokens, criminals, and most

12      people, prefer to put it in stablecoin, which is why

13      creating legislation that focuses on stablecoin, and

14      requires compliance from Circle and Tether and other

15      stablecoin issuers, is so important.

16             SENATOR MAY:  Okay.  Thank you.

17             And on that same example that you gave,

18      Ms. Swenton, about, you know, where a stock broker

19      could take over $1,000,000 from one person or over

20      $1,000,000 from a lot of people and the penalties

21      would be different, I'm just wondering about, always

22      thinking from the consumer side, if you -- does each

23      one of those consumers have to file a complaint?

24      Does it have to be a class-action?

25             Like, it feels like it would be -- even if







                                                             65
 1      the penalties were the same, the process would be a

 2      lot harder.

 3             And I just -- I'm not being a lawyer.

 4      I would love to get your advice about how we help

 5      those people for whom losing $1,000 may be more

 6      consequential in some ways than someone else losing

 7      a million.

 8             What processes are in place to help them get,

 9      you know, what they deserve?

10             STEPHANIE J. SWENTON:  Thank you, Senator.

11             Before turning to the processes, and how some

12      of the reforms I've discussed I believe would

13      facilitate that process, I -- the example I provided

14      was related to monetary thresholds.

15             However, I will note that the current

16      Senate bill, 8594, imposes multiple levels of scheme

17      to defraud.

18             One of the ways to elevate the levels of

19      scheme to defraud is certain monetary thresholds.

20             Another way is the number of victims.

21             So in the incidents that you've suggested,

22      where there could be a counterargument regarding

23      valuation of a particular asset where there was a

24      fraud committed or a theft, that alternate provision

25      in the elevation of felony levels for more than







                                                             66
 1      50 victims, more than 100 victims, more than

 2      1,000 victims, so long as, you know, property is

 3      obtained, is an alternate provision to target that

 4      conduct, where not only the individual losses may be

 5      smaller, but may be more difficult to quantify.

 6             That being said, going back to the general

 7      non-hearsay presumption in the grand jury meeting,

 8      there is a presumption of in-person testimony.

 9             The hurdles to bringing a B felony case,

10      where would you have to call over 1,000 victims,

11      would likely be insurmountable.  Even over 100 would

12      be quite difficult.

13             You know, an additional amendment that I did

14      not discuss is that, potentially, permitting certain

15      testimony to be via affidavit rather than by live

16      testimony.

17             For example, in the context of stolen

18      property, stolen credit card numbers, there is a

19      provision in the New York State statute that allows

20      victims to -- where they're only testifying as to

21      lack of permission and authority, to provide an

22      affidavit as opposed to testimony, which would allow

23      prosecutors to effectively encompass a larger scope

24      of the scheme.

25             I think in a fraud scheme where there is







                                                             67
 1      inducement and there is a narrative to be told,

 2      I don't know that an affidavit would be appropriate.

 3             But one particular gap in the law is related

 4      to identity theft.  There is clearly not an

 5      exception for victims of identity theft to testify

 6      via affidavit, simply to the fact that they did not

 7      allow their personal identifying information to be

 8      used by anyone.

 9             And that is one way to attempt to, again,

10      attack these schemes that can be very broad in

11      scope, where a victim might have a limited scope of

12      testimony, which would be to consider what type of

13      testimony might be acceptable via affidavit.

14             But I also believe that the virtual testimony

15      provision could help to greatly increase the ability

16      of prosecutors to call more witnesses in a grand

17      jury to demonstrate the scope of a scheme, where the

18      individual losses for each person might be small,

19      but, collectively, they are quite large.

20             SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.

21             I know, in discussing this in our conference,

22      people came down on either side of that.

23             Would you imagine putting guardrails on if it

24      was a case of a large number of victims, for

25      example, who presumably would all be giving similar







                                                             68
 1      testimony?

 2             Or, you know -- or would you think that that

 3      person who was defrauded of over $1,000,000 would --

 4      could -- should be allowed to testify remotely?

 5             What are you thinking, that there should be

 6      guardrails?

 7             STEPHANIE J. SWENTON:  I think the remote

 8      testimony provision, I mean, in the draft

 9      legislation we have reviewed, is based on their

10      physical ability to appear before a grand jury and

11      the distance to be traveled.

12             I do think there is an interest to the grand

13      jury hearing the narrative.

14             So I would never want to say that there is a

15      monetary threshold to whether a victim would be able

16      to testify via affidavit or via virtual testimony

17      versus live testimony.

18             I think there are other considerations, if

19      implemented, that could help to achieve the same

20      goals, which are the ones in the proposed

21      legislation.

22             SENATOR MAY:  Okay.  Thank you.

23             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

24             Senator Murray.

25             SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you, Chairman.







                                                             69
 1             I'm going to kind of piggyback -- and thank

 2      you both for being here.

 3             I'm going to piggyback on something

 4      Senator May brought up in the last panel, and that

 5      is, kind of, the one-stop-shopping aspect; and

 6      I want to bring up the issue that I brought up, and

 7      that is the escrow funds being stolen.

 8             So is that DFS?  Would that be the attorney

 9      general?

10             I know there are licensing issues when it

11      comes to attorneys.  I know there are things like

12      this.

13             But when you're stealing the amount that

14      appears to be being stolen now, it continues to

15      grow, this continues to be a problem.

16             Is that something you, the AG's office, would

17      take on directly, or would it be DFS, or a

18      combination of both?

19             How would that work?

20             STEPHANIE J. SWENTON:  The attorney general's

21      office, our criminal jurisdiction is unique.  There

22      are certain statutes that provide us direct

23      jurisdiction over certain subject matter areas.

24             The Martin Act, related to securities and

25      commodities fraud, is one.  It has both civil and







                                                             70
 1      criminal provisions.

 2             Certain provisions of the labor law is

 3      another, that give the attorney general direct

 4      jurisdiction for civil and criminal enforcement in

 5      that space.

 6             Related to other types of crimes, the

 7      62 county district attorneys, you know, obviously

 8      have power to enforce those.

 9             But that being said, we regularly partner

10      with state executive agencies who provide us with

11      referrals under the state Executive Law,

12      Section 63(3), to activate our jurisdiction for

13      areas of priority enforcement.

14             So if this is an area of priority

15      enforcement, obviously, we welcome complaints

16      related to all financial fraud schemes.

17             We do have an online portal that receives an

18      incredible breadth of financial fraud complaints,

19      and those are discussions we're happy to have.

20             SENATOR MURRAY:  Okay.  Thank you.

21             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

22             And thank you both for the testimony.

23             For Ms. Swenton, first, I want to focus for

24      a second on elder fraud.

25             And, you know, we have in our laws the







                                                             71
 1      definition of what would bump up consequence and

 2      penalty for someone who has, you know, allegedly,

 3      taken advantage of an older individual.

 4             But we -- currently, the "vulnerable elderly

 5      person" standard is something that, you know,

 6      I think, in some cases, is a high standard to

 7      achieve.

 8             And I'm hoping you can maybe talk to us about

 9      whether this is a workable standard for older adults

10      who we wouldn't, sort of, commonly consider them

11      vulnerable just because they are old.  They still

12      remain sharp, et cetera, but they were still a

13      victim of a scheme or fraud.

14             And I'm hoping you can talk to us about

15      whether we need to reexamine that.

16             STEPHANIE J. SWENTON:  I think there are

17      opportunities to expand the definition of a

18      "vulnerable elderly person" besides sort of an

19      arbitrary number related to age.  There are multiple

20      issues that play into that in terms of capacity.

21             But, you know, those are definitely

22      discussions that we would welcome.

23             And, again, yet another aspect of what

24      I think would be incredibly powerful amendments to

25      the "scheme to defraud" statute is elevating levels







                                                             72
 1      when one of the persons defrauded -- at least one of

 2      the persons is a vulnerably -- vulnerable elderly

 3      individual.

 4             Just, in my role, in particular, we've

 5      recently prosecuted fraud schemes in both

 6      Queens County and Suffolk County, where elderly

 7      victims were defrauded by trusted former investment

 8      advisers of their entire life savings, leaving them

 9      to have to return to work, sell their homes.

10             This is a particularly vulnerable pool, and

11      I do think it's a fruitful area of discussion, to

12      make sure that that definition is fully capturing

13      the scope of those individuals who are often both of

14      means because they have significant retirement

15      savings and subject to being preyed upon by

16      white-collar criminals.

17             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

18             And to Ms. Maswoswe -- excuse me -- we're

19      steeped in the cryptocurrency stuff, where we know

20      the lingo, we know the acronyms, we know

21      [indiscernible].

22             Most people are not.

23             And part of what makes them more susceptible

24      to being taken advantage of is this knowledge

25      disparity.







                                                             73
 1             And so I'm hoping you can talk to us, and

 2      sort of say it as plainly as you can, what the

 3      problem is as it relates to people being taken

 4      advantage of.

 5             If you are a person that has seen an ad or

 6      you got a message that said, "I have a real great

 7      opportunity for you to make a lot of money in

 8      crypto," turns out that that is not true, you get

 9      taken advantage of, what recourse do you have as the

10      law stands right now?

11             SHAMISO MASWOSWE:  So I think that there

12      certainly is an information gap.  There is a lot of

13      lingo surrounding crypto that makes it sound very

14      sophisticated and very fancy and very -- like,

15      there's a lot of "FOMO" around it; a lot of fear of

16      missing out.  Like, this is your chance.

17             But what we have found and what studies have

18      found, that -- is that there's a lot of predatory

19      inclusion around this as well.  There's a lot of

20      targeting of communities of color, of young people,

21      of, like, this is your chance to achieve the

22      American dream of, to get out of poverty, of

23      gambling, really.

24             And that is really taking advantage of

25      vulnerable populations, and is of great concern to







                                                             74
 1      us.

 2             And so -- and so -- and so that -- and

 3      I think that also makes it a much more dangerous --

 4      a much more dangerous kind of product to peddle; and

 5      much more dangerous when you have celebrities that

 6      are out and influencers that are out peddling this

 7      as well, without the appropriate risks.

 8             So, you know, when you're -- when they're

 9      securities or they're bonds or they're much more

10      regulated products, there are warnings and there are

11      disclosures, and you get a lot more information.

12      When there's conflicts of interest, there's a lot

13      more information that consumers and investors will

14      get.

15             And you just don't get that with crypto.

16             So what are your remedies?

17             Your remedies are to report it.

18             Your remedies are to try and do your due

19      diligence, and to make sure that folks are

20      registered; that they're registered with the

21      attorney general's office, that they are

22      bit-licensed.

23             That you do searches to see if they are --

24      have -- that they are -- that they -- whether or not

25      they've been accused of being a scam.  See what







                                                             75
 1      other people are saying about them.

 2             And that you, you know, are not pressured

 3      when someone is saying "that you have to do it right

 4      now."  And that's a red flag.

 5             The attorney general has done a number of

 6      investor alerts and consumer alerts.  I think we did

 7      one just a couple weeks ago about pig butchering.

 8      That that is a really big way that New Yorkers are

 9      really being pick-pocketed by international

10      organizations -- criminal organizations from around

11      the world, that are coming and just picking the

12      pockets of everyday New Yorkers, when -- you know,

13      from romance scams and from other kinds of scams

14      that people are falling victim to.

15             And so your recourses are to do your

16      homework, do your diligence.  And if you don't

17      understand it, if it sounds too good to be true,

18      then it probably is.

19             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

20             And then, lastly, back to you, Ms. Swenton,

21      you made the comparison between the different scales

22      of consequence and penalties in the stockbroker

23      example, and I'm hoping to expand on that a little

24      bit.

25             If you can tell us what your office is







                                                             76
 1      currently able to do within the confines of the law

 2      now, and what you might be able to do should we

 3      improve on the "scheme to defraud" statute, and what

 4      types of activity do you think you would be able to

 5      capture?

 6             STEPHANIE J. SWENTON:  Yes.  So, you know,

 7      under the current tools we have, we are able to

 8      bring charges against individuals who defraud a

 9      tremendous number of investors of lower amounts,

10      sort of in the thousands rather than the millions.

11             But the tools we have, in terms of holding

12      those offenders accountable, are quite limited under

13      the sentencing structures and speedy-trial

14      structures.

15             So the hypothetical that I provided, if it's

16      less than $1,000, which does happen in some very

17      pervasive schemes, that is a Class A misdemeanor,

18      which is a summons, it's a summons ticket, that

19      would have to be brought to trial within 90 days.

20             And a case of this kind of complexity would,

21      pretty much, be an insurmountable hurdle.

22             If -- even though there is an E felony scheme

23      to defraud that might encompass multiple of those

24      petty larcenies, that is a desk-appearance-ticket

25      offense.  It's not a bail-eligible offense.







                                                             77
 1             And any white-collar-crime penalty in

 2      New York, except for a Class B felony, there is no

 3      mandatory minimum sentence of incarceration.  Those

 4      are all probation-eligible offenses.

 5             You know, obviously, incarceration is not the

 6      only deterrent, and restitution is always a priority

 7      for us as well.

 8             But where we are able to bring charges that

 9      most wholly reflect the scope of the criminal

10      conduct, we are able to achieve better resolutions.

11             Whether it is millions of dollars of

12      restitution, whether it is a deterrence of a repeat

13      offender who is cycling through and committing

14      frauds on different vulnerable populations, the

15      sentencing tools and the charging tools and -- that

16      are allowed to us over higher-level felonies are

17      quite different.

18             And, in particular, the example I think that

19      is now falling through the cracks is those crimes

20      where the thefts are less than $1,001, because

21      they're not even felony offenses, and typically not

22      presented to a grand jury on very accelerated time

23      frame.

24             And those cases, I believe, are probably

25      completely falling through the cracks,







                                                             78
 1      unfortunately.

 2             And I give the examples of the securities

 3      fraud context, but those kinds of frauds span the

 4      gamut.

 5             The attorney general has done a lot of

 6      enforcement in residential contractor fraud cases.

 7      For some individuals, that may only be several

 8      thousand dollars, but it may be everything they had,

 9      and they're left with a home in ruins.

10             And those are the kinds of cases that are

11      very impactful that, unfortunately, present hurdles

12      under the current statute.

13             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you very much.

14             And Senator May on a second round.

15             SENATOR MAY:  Just for [indiscernible] --

16      because of your answer before, I'm curious.

17             You basically said, if people -- the remedy

18      for crypto fraud is for people to do their due

19      diligence and do their research, which we always

20      want people to do.

21             But it made me wonder if there's room for the

22      State to actually have a seal of approval on some

23      options that might -- you know, where people could

24      feel more confident of them.

25             Is that something that we do, or that you







                                                             79
 1      think about doing, with vetting some of these

 2      schemes?

 3             SHAMISO MASWOSWE:  Yes.

 4             So, you know, I don't want to put, you know,

 5      the burden on the victim.  You certainly never want

 6      to blame the victim.  But, you know, everyone has to

 7      protect themselves because, you know, ultimately,

 8      you have to.

 9             But, you know, making sure that folks are

10      registered is important.  And so a lot of our work

11      around crypto has been going after folks that have

12      not -- that are not registered with our office.

13             Making sure that folks have a bit license is

14      also important, because, you know, when someone

15      chooses to operate in the shadows, that often is the

16      first sort of harbinger of fraud because, why are

17      you doing that?

18             Get registered, get a bit license.  And if

19      you choose not to do that, then that's the first

20      single -- the first sign of fraud.

21             And so when we have pursued these

22      registration cases, then what we ultimately end up

23      finding is fraud.

24             So an example is our Coinseed case.  We

25      brought that under our registration statute.  And







                                                             80
 1      then once we filed it as a registration case, then

 2      we were hit with 200 complaints from the public that

 3      said that they had been defrauded.

 4             And so then we ended up going and getting a

 5      TRO, getting a receivership, and it turned out to be

 6      a massive fraud.

 7             The same with KuCoin.

 8             KuCoin is a major crypto platform.  And we

 9      filed a crypto registration, that they failed to

10      register a case with us.

11             And then it turned out that the feds were

12      also looking at them for anti-money laundering and

13      fraud.  And that they contacted us -- DOJ contacted

14      us and said, Hey, you filed a registration case.

15      Are they going to talk to us if we contact them?

16             And we said, Yeah.  We can give you their

17      number.

18             And so that's what we're fighting, is that,

19      if you're not willing to get registered, then

20      there's something wrong, and that's the first sign

21      of fraud.

22             Which is why, at the federal level, it's so

23      important to make sure that we are not preempted at

24      the federal level from registration, and certainly

25      not from fraud.







                                                             81
 1             SENATOR MAY:  And that registration, is that

 2      something that's evident to the consumer who might

 3      be contemplating a transaction?

 4             Is that public and transparent information

 5      for them?

 6             SHAMISO MASWOSWE:  Yes.

 7             Whether they are registered with the AG and

 8      have a bit license with DFS, that's all public

 9      information.

10             Also, whether they are licensed with the SEC

11      or the CFTC, all of that is public -- publicly

12      available information.

13             SENATOR MAY:  Okay.  Great.  Thank you.

14             SENATOR MYRIE:  Sure, go ahead.

15             Senator Murray.

16             SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you, Chairman.

17             I just have one follow-up.

18             Earlier you had mentioned that young -- the

19      younger generation is the target a lot of times.

20      And you had mentioned celebrities, influencers.

21             Are they in any way responsible or held

22      accountable if they are pushing a product like this

23      and it ends up being fraudulent?  Are they in anyway

24      held responsible?

25             SHAMISO MASWOSWE:  Absolutely, absolutely.







                                                             82
 1             They have been held responsible at the

 2      federal level and they've been held responsible by

 3      our office.

 4             Just this last year, one of our larger cases

 5      involved a large fund who was headed up by a very

 6      popular person who used his credentials in the

 7      financial -- in the traditional financial world.

 8      And he was involved in Luna/Terra.  And at that

 9      point, Luna/Terra was trading at 33 cents --

10      33 cents.

11             And he made a secret deal with Do Kwan and

12      brought it over to the Western world.  And, you

13      know, went around on Twitter, saying, This is the

14      next big thing.  This is the -- it's -- it's going

15      to go up in value.

16             And he's a holder, and that their firm is a

17      holder, of this; all the while he was selling, he

18      was selling, he was selling.  And it went up from 33

19      to a dollar.  He said he was going to get a tattoo

20      if it went up to 100.  It went up to 100.  It went

21      higher than a 100, and then it crashed.

22             And they made hundreds of millions of dollars

23      and everyone else lost.

24             And so we went after them, and we got

25      $200 million from them.  And we got also reforms







                                                             83
 1      from them, because that's also important.

 2             It's important that, in addition to getting

 3      restitution and getting money, that we try to also

 4      get reforms from these companies as well.

 5             And -- yeah.

 6             So, yes, it's important that we also go after

 7      the people that are going and shilling on the

 8      Internet and deceiving people.

 9             SENATOR MURRAY:  Okay, great.  Thank you.

10             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you both.

11             And thank you for the work that the office

12      continues to do.

13             Thank you.

14             SHAMISO MASWOSWE:  Thank you.

15             STEPHANIE J. SWENTON:  Thank you.

16             SENATOR MYRIE:  We will next hear from a

17      number of district attorney offices.

18             I believe that we are joined by

19      DA Alvin Bragg who is the Manhattan District

20      Attorney; we are joined by the Albany District

21      Attorney, DA Lee Kindlon; and on behalf of the

22      Brooklyn District Attorney, Eric Gonzales, the head

23      of the virtual currency unit, Alona Katz.

24             So make your way down.

25             Okay, take it away.







                                                             84
 1             DA ALVIN BRAGG:  Good morning, Chair Myrie,

 2      Chair May, Senator Murray.

 3             Thank you for the opportunity to testify

 4      today.

 5             As you know, New Yorkers lose millions --

 6      billions, excuse me, to frauds and scams.

 7             My office is investigating and prosecuting a

 8      wide variety of white-collar conduct, from

 9      investment scams, securities fraud, wage theft,

10      tenant harassment, cryptocurrency that's being used

11      to do terror financing, and all other kinds of

12      crimes that are being underwritten.

13             We submitted written testimony, but I in

14      particular wanted to highlight three proposals today

15      that would really, really help our investigative

16      work.

17             The first, the Scam Act, proposed by

18      Senator Myrie/sponsored by Senator Myrie.

19             And I heard my colleague from the

20      attorney general's office already talk about the

21      scheme to defraud, so I won't belabor it.

22             But I want to add to her comments, our

23      support from the Manhattan District Attorney's

24      Office.

25             You know, currently, as she said, if someone







                                                             85
 1      engaged in conduct with the intent to defraud at

 2      least 10 people, and succeeds in defrauding at least

 3      one person or obtains at least 1,000 through fraud,

 4      they're charged with a Class E felony.

 5             But if the same person attempted a fraud,

 6      fill in the number, 50, 100, 1,000, they face the

 7      same charge.

 8             And so we're facing the same issues that the

 9      attorney general's office is in terms of

10      accountability, a stratified penalty system, in

11      deterrence.

12             And so conduct that causes more widespread

13      and severe harm should be eligible for more severe

14      charges.

15             And I want to just underscore, in our docket,

16      the complexity.

17             You know, we are not talking about, you know,

18      if it's a grand larceny or petit larceny, we'll

19      prosecute it that way.

20             The schemes to defrauds that we're

21      prosecuting generally are complex actors who we

22      believe, in many cases, are pricing in.  And

23      deterrence would be really, really garnered by

24      having more penalties.

25             There's some actors, obviously, that are







                                                             86
 1      acting impulsively, and added penalties might not be

 2      a deterrent.

 3             But in our docket what we see, is the people

 4      that we're charging with scheme to defraud generally

 5      are actors that we think would be deferred --

 6      deterred by heightened penalties.

 7             The second bill that I want to highlight in

 8      my oral testimony, again, sponsored by

 9      Senator Myrie, is the CRYPTO Act.  It would

10      criminalize the operation of a virtual currency

11      business without a license.

12             And I'm sitting, listening to the testimony

13      and the colloquy about registration.

14             And registration is great, but there needs to

15      be a consequence if you're not licensed.

16             And, currently, an operator of an unlicensed

17      virtual currency business in New York faces only

18      civil penalties.

19             That's not true in a number of other states,

20      and it's not true in the federal system where a

21      criminal conviction carries -- can carry five years

22      in prison.

23             We would like to have that tool in our

24      toolbox.

25             And given the pervasiveness that we're seeing







                                                             87
 1      with money-laundering, underwrite all types of

 2      crimes, from identity theft and types of scams we're

 3      talking about here today, but also violent crimes.

 4             And, you know, we tried a crypto-terror

 5      financing case within the last few years.

 6             And so the scope of the conduct that this

 7      would touch, the CRYPTO Act would establish criminal

 8      penalties for these unlicensed operators, and,

 9      again, gets to the steam of increasing the severity

10      based on the value of the currency and the duration

11      of the conduct:  Unlicensed crypto transactions

12      amount to $1 million or more.  Within one year or

13      less would amount to a C Felony, carrying a maximum

14      of 5 to 15 years' incarceration.

15             And, again, I would underscore the types of

16      actors that we're talking about here.

17             These are people who are availing themselves

18      of shadowy corners of our markets.

19             We have traditional brick-and-mortar banking

20      systems that have requirements, like Know Your

21      Customer Rights.

22             These are people who are seeking out the

23      shadowy corners, using the anonymity to prey on

24      individual victims.  And whether it's identity

25      theft, or even we're seeing in more violent crime.







                                                             88
 1             And so having these enhanced penalties for

 2      not having the license, and having it be criminal,

 3      is really, really paramount.

 4             The third, and I heard my colleague

 5      AG Swenton talking about, but -- and I know it seems

 6      maybe wonky, but I want to underscore the provision

 7      of the SCAM Act that aims to modernize the process

 8      for introducing routine business records in the

 9      grand jury.

10             We're just behind the times on this.

11             New York is the only state in the nation that

12      requires an in-person custodial witness rather than

13      a sworn affidavit to authenticate certain routine

14      business records.

15             And, here, I would just underscore really how

16      routine.  We are talking about the same set of

17      boilerplate questions over and over to the

18      witnesses.

19             I hear my time is gone.

20             You have my written testimony, and you also

21      have two phenomenal colleagues that -- to hear from;

22      so I'll stop there.

23             Thank you.

24             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

25             DA LEE C. KINDLON:  Good morning, everyone.







                                                             89
 1             Chairman Myrie, distinguished members of the

 2      committee.

 3             My name is Lee Kindlon.  I'm the Albany

 4      County District Attorney.

 5             I am grateful for the opportunity to appear

 6      before you today, and to go on the record in strong

 7      support of the SCAM Act.

 8             As the chief law enforcement officer of

 9      Albany County, I see every day what happens when the

10      laws fail to keep pace with the ingenuity of those

11      who seek to defraud our communities.

12             And when I talk about communities, I talk

13      especially about our vulnerable populations:  Our

14      seniors, you know, those who might not have access

15      to lawyers who will take their phone call right

16      away; and also our immigrant population who have

17      always been susceptible to scams.

18             New York's white-collar crime and fraud

19      statutes have not been substantially updated for

20      decades.  In that time, the landscape has

21      transformed beyond recognition.  The criminals have

22      adapted and our laws have not.

23             Your bill, this bill, seeks to correct that

24      imbalance, which is why we are strong proponents of

25      it.







                                                             90
 1             Just a few months ago, in December, my

 2      office, in conjunction with the attorney general's

 3      office, prosecuted one of the first deed cases in

 4      the area, and we were successful.

 5             But let me tell you, us getting to that point

 6      was far harder than it needed to be.

 7             We were able to secure a conviction, the

 8      sentence is still pending.

 9             But just to get from Point A to Point B, you

10      know, such things should not take herculean efforts.

11      It should be a very routine thing because this is

12      something that, obviously, we want to be able to

13      prosecute, because you find more and more scam

14      artists are, again, attacking the elderly when it

15      comes to, you know, the security of their home.

16             And, you know, the other thing -- and, again,

17      I have written testimony that highlights this -- but

18      the other thing we're finding with, you know, the

19      vulnerable population, especially seniors, is these

20      are very proud people who don't like to admit that

21      they may have been conned.

22             You know, and there are seniors in my life

23      who, educated, experienced, but they get the phone

24      calls, they get the visits at the front door, and

25      they are afraid to call, you know, me; they're







                                                             91
 1      afraid to call people who could say, "no, that's a

 2      scam," because they don't want to admit that this

 3      happened to them.

 4             So what this law does is, we are able to more

 5      effectively prosecute cases, prosecute cases far

 6      easier, going forward.

 7             And it allows us to spread that message out

 8      into the community that, Hey, you know, your

 9      government is out there working for you, your

10      government is out there looking to protect you, and

11      prosecute these people who would try and take your

12      home.

13             I also want to highlight the wage theft

14      provisions.

15             I've now been district attorney for just

16      about 14 months.  And when I came into office, I was

17      excited to be able to prosecute wage theft.  This

18      was one of my big things, because, you know, you

19      find those shady contractors who are always looking

20      to undercut, especially our unions and our labor

21      force with cheap labor, out-of-state labor.

22             But what we found, as a practical matter,

23      when we really dug into it, was that there are so

24      many layers and shell companies and labor brokers

25      and, you know, systems set up to get around these







                                                             92
 1      outdated laws that, again, as a practical matter,

 2      especially for an office that -- you know, I have a

 3      midsized office, I have resources, but I don't have

 4      as much as I want.

 5             Right?

 6             But these laws make it easier for smaller

 7      offices like mine to be able to go out and prosecute

 8      wage theft.

 9             And as Albany is looking at, and we're very

10      grateful for the State to give us the money to

11      rebuild our downtown.  But we are looking at,

12      potentially, you know, a lot of renovations coming

13      to Albany.  And I want to make sure that that money

14      goes to the right place.

15             And so, again, this is the sign on the front

16      door, that wage theft won't be allowed as we rebuild

17      downtown Albany.

18             So the wage theft provisions, especially, are

19      things that I look for, and I look to be able to use

20      those tools to cut through a lot of these shell

21      companies, a lot of these labor brokers, to get to

22      the heart of the matter, and make sure we can

23      prosecute those individuals who would defraud and

24      undercut the labor market.

25             I always have so much to say.







                                                             93
 1             So I'll cut to the end because, again, I have

 2      submitted written testimony.

 3             Members of the committee, the people of

 4      Albany County, like New Yorkers across the state,

 5      deserve a legal system equipped to confront

 6      twenty-first century fraud.

 7             The SCAM Act is a serious and overdue step in

 8      that direction.

 9             It updates our statutes, closes loopholes,

10      and introduces proportionate new tools, and sends a

11      clear message that New York will not tolerate those

12      who exploit its residents for financial gain.

13             So I'm proud to add the Albany County

14      District Attorney's Office to the record in support

15      of this bill.

16             Thank you.

17             ALONA KATZ:  Thank you.

18             Thank you, Chairperson Myrie, the Senate

19      Codes Committee, for inviting me to speak today, and

20      for your leadership in this matter.

21             Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzales

22      strongly supports Senate Bill 8594, the Rip-Off Act,

23      and urges the legislature to pass this bill without

24      delay.

25             So my name is Alona Katz.  I am a lifelong







                                                             94
 1      New Yorker, and I am currently chief of the Virtual

 2      Currency Unit at the Kings County District

 3      Attorney's Office.

 4             I want to share with everyone what it is like

 5      to be on the front lines of fighting to protect

 6      New Yorkers, including some of Brooklyn's most

 7      vulnerable residents -- seniors, immigrants, and

 8      non-English speakers -- from a tsunami of online and

 9      cryptocurrency scams.

10             With just a phone and an Internet connection,

11      international scammers are in the ears of

12      New Yorkers, targeting bank accounts, life savings,

13      and generational wealth that parents had planned to

14      leave their children.

15             Each year, scammers grow more adept at

16      stealing and laundering cryptocurrency, increasingly

17      using AI, a new technology, to exploit victims.

18             I spend most of my days talking to victims of

19      these scams.

20             Not a week goes by that I don't find myself

21      on the phone with a community member, struggling to

22      accept that every cent they have, and every dream

23      and goal they spent their whole life savings for, is

24      gone.  They tell me they feel broken.

25             I have heard from a retired New York City







                                                             95
 1      schoolteacher who lost her entire pension.

 2             I've struggled to answer a senior citizen who

 3      asked me how he would pay his rent next month, after

 4      he invested everything in what turned out to be a

 5      fraudulent cryptocurrency platform.

 6             I've listened to the story of how a scammer

 7      preyed on a New Yorker who tried to invest in

 8      cryptocurrency because she was desperate to earn

 9      more money so that she could spare her family the

10      burden of medical bills for her terminal illness.

11             In the fall of 2023, District

12      Attorney Gonzales established the Virtual Currency

13      Unit after hearing about the rise of Brooklyn

14      residents asking for help after being victimized by

15      these types of scams.

16             The unit's mission is to fight back to

17      aggressively investigate and [indiscernible] those

18      behind these devastating schemes, to arm our

19      community with the knowledge needed to protect

20      themselves, and to try and claw back stolen funds.

21             I have been an assistant district attorney

22      for about 15 years, and I am here to tell you we

23      need better tools, laws, and support to carry out

24      this mission.

25             The Rip-Off Act has answers and solutions.







                                                             96
 1             Since the creation of the Virtual Currency

 2      Unit, we have shut down hundreds of websites that

 3      look like real cryptocurrency investment platforms,

 4      replacing the fraud platform with a law enforcement

 5      warning.

 6             We've disrupted scam operations and alerted

 7      victims.

 8             We've expanded outreach efforts to warn

 9      Brooklyn residents about staying safe online.

10             We've even managed to see some stolen

11      cryptocurrency.  But because of the speed at which

12      cryptocurrency moves and legal limitations, it was

13      only a small portion of what was taken.

14             There is so much more that we could be doing

15      for our victims through a modernization of New York

16      State laws.

17             That's why we're urging the legislature to

18      pass Senator Myrie's bill, which provides

19      much-needed updates so that law enforcement can more

20      effectively and prosecute the crimes, and return

21      stolen cryptocurrency to victims.

22             And I just want to highlight some key

23      provisions of the bill that would be particularly

24      helpful.

25             It explicitly includes virtual currency as







                                                             97
 1      property for the purpose of larceny crimes.

 2             It defines a virtual currency transaction for

 3      the purpose of money-laundering crimes.

 4             It would allow for the admission of

 5      cryptocurrency exchange business records as evidence

 6      in the grand jury with a business record affidavit,

 7      as traditional bank records already do.

 8             And it would establish a procedure and legal

 9      process for the return of stolen cryptocurrency of

10      fraudulent schemes to victims, including notice,

11      hearing, and evidentiary requirements.

12             If enacted, these modernizations will help

13      ensure that victims of cryptocurrency and online

14      crimes are treated no differently than victims of

15      more traditional crimes.

16             The urgency and need for this modernization

17      at the state level is growing, worsened by the

18      federal government's recent shift in priorities and

19      retreat from cryptocurrency enforcement.

20             As District Attorney Gonzales testified

21      recently at the city council, federal agencies are

22      losing resources to focus on investigating

23      cryptocurrency scams.

24             So what that means for most New York victims

25      of cryptocurrency fraud, this often leaves them only







                                                             98
 1      with their local district attorneys' offices as a

 2      meaningful defense and resource.

 3             We simply can't afford to fail our victims

 4      and residents by being ill-equipped to handle these

 5      types of cases.

 6             So once again, thank you.

 7             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you very much.

 8             And I'm aware that Senator Murray wants to

 9      ask some questions.  May have to step out for a

10      committee meeting.

11             And so if you don't get the exchange that you

12      need, we'll try to get you on the second round

13      hopefully with the panel still being here.

14             SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you, Chairman.

15             I, literally, have to be at a committee

16      meeting in three minutes.

17             So I'm just going to throw a question out,

18      and I know I can't even listen to the answer, but

19      I want to make sure I get it on the record.

20             In particular, I want to talk about just

21      SNAP-benefit fraud and being stolen.

22             Is this becoming, especially in New York

23      City, it's prevalent there -- but, first off, let me

24      say this:  That's on us; that's on New York State.

25      We have not moved as quickly as we should to get the







                                                             99
 1      chip technology.  We are behind.

 2             Thank God, the Governor's put money in the

 3      budget this time to at least start moving.

 4             But we are 12 to 18 months away from them

 5      being there, and that's being generous.

 6             So are you seeing that this is more of a --

 7      an organized scam, if you will?

 8             This isn't just somebody, you know, stealing

 9      one thing.  But this is putting skimmers on things.

10             Is this more organized; is that what we're

11      seeing?

12             DA ALVIN BRAGG:  So I really appreciate the

13      question.  It's something that we've been focused on

14      in the office.

15             I would say it's a nationwide issue, is what

16      we're seeing.  We are closely examining it.

17             There are someone one-offs.  But, certainly,

18      from what we're seeing, it appears to be that there

19      are organized, complex networks.

20             And so we are in the process of investigating

21      a number of matters in this space.

22             SENATOR MURRAY:  And do you have the tools

23      you need to do that?

24             DA ALVIN BRAGG:  I think from an

25      investigative standpoint we do.







                                                             100
 1             And I don't want to prejudge an investigation

 2      before it ends.

 3             But I think this could be one where the

 4      "scheme to defraud" statute change would be

 5      particularly helpful.

 6             You know, if it turns out -- and, again,

 7      I don't know, since it's a hypothetical, because we

 8      haven't, you know, reached conclusions.

 9             But you could see in this space, you know,

10      someone who is organizing across county lines,

11      across jurisdiction lines, where, again, the "scheme

12      to defraud" statute can also be helpful.

13             And taking amounts, you know, 500, 900, you

14      know, increments that add up, and so the -- both the

15      numerical victim change that's in the scheme to

16      defraud, and also the dollar amount, could very

17      well -- this could very well be an instance where

18      that change would be remarkably helpful.

19             SENATOR MURRAY:  That's a great point.

20             Thank you.

21             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, Senator Murray.

22             Okay.  So I've got a number of questions.

23             And I'll start first, with gratitude, to

24      New York City DAs who made the trip up here.

25             Thank you.







                                                             101
 1             Our Albany DA had, you know, not too far a

 2      distance to get here, but we're still very grateful

 3      for your attendance.

 4             So to DA Bragg, and thank you for your

 5      leadership and work on the CRYPTO Act, and a number

 6      of other issues.

 7             You know, you've spoken about, in other

 8      forums, our need to turn our attention to our

 9      white-collar statutes.

10             And, you know, my position has been -- you

11      know, I chair the Codes Committee.  A lot of very

12      important criminal justice issues make their way

13      through this committee.  We have had to grapple with

14      a lot of things as a legislature.

15             But we have made a lot of investments as a

16      state and as a system in tackling, sort of,

17      colloquially called "street crime," and investments

18      in that direction.

19             And I don't think that we have done the same

20      thing on this front.

21             And I'm wondering, given your jurisdiction,

22      and being the financial capital of the world, what

23      value you see in us pursuing, sort of, more

24      attention to our white-collar crime statutes?

25             DA ALVIN BRAGG:  And I thank you for your







                                                             102
 1      leadership.  I think we were all here together for

 2      your convening.  And so we thank you for -- I thank

 3      you for your leadership.

 4             Look, I think New York, in general, is

 5      extraordinarily special.

 6             Manhattan is the financial capital of the

 7      world, and many of these provisions interact, you

 8      know, with that.

 9             We -- whether it's the virtual appearance.

10             We've got many victims who come for tourism,

11      tourist capital of the world we would also suggest.

12      And then they go back home, and reaching them and

13      getting them back.  They are victims.  And someone

14      who preyed upon them may also then prey upon someone

15      who lives here.

16             The CRYPTO Act with a banking center.  And as

17      people shift away from the brick-and-mortar banks,

18      there's still networks here, and so we see

19      incredible activity.

20             I mentioned some of the matters we've done,

21      which we were able to do, much like my colleague in

22      Albany, we're able to do it, but it takes more work

23      because of the structures.

24             You know, we -- we've -- within the last few

25      years, have prosecuted a, you know, $5 million







                                                             103
 1      unregistered Bitcoin ATA business that was marketing

 2      to all sorts of criminal actors; a peer-to-peer

 3      trader who laundered millions in drug proceeds;

 4      a dark web drug-trafficking ring, all able to, sort

 5      of, do the work.  Sometimes, because these actors

 6      take a foot out of the shadows and use the

 7      traditional banking structure, and then we're able

 8      to follow them.  Sometimes it's old-fashioned

 9      surveillance.  Sometimes it's puffery on their part,

10      where they're bragging, you know, on some social

11      media app.

12             But that's what we've been able to do.

13             We know there is so much more.  This market

14      is huge.

15             And so the licensing in particular, having

16      criminal penalties for not having a license.

17             They don't have a license, so they don't have

18      to know their customers, they don't have to do

19      suspicious activity reports.

20             And so I would say, particularly, you know,

21      what we see on our docket, having drawn in, over

22      generations, people who are engaged in all sorts of

23      financial transactions, they're here, they're used

24      to being in Manhattan.  And now they see another way

25      to do it where they don't have to do this reporting,







                                                             104
 1      and they're pivoting, and they're laundering, you

 2      know, millions and millions of dollars.

 3             And so, you know, all the changes, you know,

 4      in the written testimony are particularly important.

 5             But I would say the licensing regime.

 6             And given the volume of our work, and this

 7      is, I would say, both street crimes and white-collar

 8      crimes, the grand jury business record.  It would

 9      just -- it would allow, you know, one, from a fiscal

10      standpoint, the amount of money that is spent, but

11      also the amount of grand jury time.

12             Grand jury time is precious.

13             We have to go to the people and get an

14      indictment, and the use of that time is precious.

15             And so even though that seems sort of wonky,

16      and I know you appreciate it, but I spend time on

17      it, because that time allows us to do more cases, do

18      more complicated cases.  Save money for the state.

19             And, you know, all we contend, without

20      prejudice to any due process rights, because we're

21      only talking about the grand jury process.

22             As you know, I was a federal prosecutor

23      before this.  You know, hearsay is allowed in the

24      federal grand jury.

25             We're not proposing that.  We're not -- you







                                                             105
 1      know, this is sort of a very, I would say, a small

 2      step, but one that would be so impactful on both our

 3      white-collar and our street-crime practices.

 4             SENATOR MYRIE:  And if you can, DA, the

 5      bifurcation of white-collar and street crime is

 6      something, as I have spent more time on this issue,

 7      have realized, particularly in the crypto case, that

 8      they are actually becoming increasingly, if not

 9      wholly, related now, because of the mechanisms that

10      are being used by organized crime rings.

11             So I'm wondering if you could speak to that

12      as well.

13             DA ALVIN BRAGG:  100 percent.

14             I mean, you know, we tried a crypto case that

15      sounds white-collar.  But thing that we alleged and

16      we proved and got a conviction, was using that money

17      to send it overseas to finance terrorism.

18             You know, closer to home, you know, we see

19      everything from supporting, you know, drug

20      trafficking, and other things that are sort of

21      traditional street crimes.

22             I mean, generally, we see, with some

23      organized, you know, crime rings, they want to make

24      money, and then they want to hide the money.

25             And you see this real intersection that --







                                                             106
 1      you know, I became a prosecutor for the first time

 2      in 2003.  And increasingly, this is anecdotal, but,

 3      increasingly, really, this intersection.  And we see

 4      it in our docket, where -- you know, I'll give just

 5      one vignette:

 6             There was, you know, someone who we suspected

 7      was engaged in gun trafficking, but we couldn't

 8      prove it.

 9             He was much more open about his fraud which

10      he was advertising on a social media channel.

11             And so we did the fraud investigation.  We

12      said, all things being equal, you know, let's do the

13      fraud investigation on the person we think is gun

14      trafficking.

15             And then when we brought that case down, we

16      did a search warrant, we found a gun as a part of

17      the search.  Did a ballistics match and were able to

18      solve a shooting.

19             We are -- we're -- you know, that's one

20      example.  But what we are seeing is sort of an

21      overlap, in effect, with staffing, also really

22      having more dialogue within our office between our

23      white-collar and our street-crimes practice.

24             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, DA.

25             Alona, I thought the testimony on sort of







                                                             107
 1      your day-to-day practice and what you're seeing in

 2      Brooklyn, and I'm not just saying this because I'm

 3      from Brooklyn, but I think makes it very real for

 4      people listening, to understand what the actual

 5      implications are.

 6             And so I'm hoping you can spend a little bit

 7      more time talking about just the regular examples of

 8      how illicit activity in the cryptocurrency space is

 9      impacting regular New Yorkers.

10             This is not tech bros or, you know, people;

11      just everyday folks, what the implications are?

12             ALONA KATZ:  Absolutely.

13             There is no such thing as a typical victim in

14      these scams.

15             When people ask me, "What can I do to protect

16      myself?" I tell them, You should think of yourself

17      as a potential victim.

18             Once you have the mentality of, "I can never

19      fall for that," you're vulnerable.

20             We have an action center, the Brooklyn

21      District Attorney's Office, that we regularly get

22      calls from.  And we're also looking at NYPD

23      statistics and other federal databases to find our

24      victims.

25             It is, the harm that occurs is irreparable.







                                                             108
 1             When I say "generational wealth," you know,

 2      I've spoken to people that emphasized, I don't want

 3      to be thought of as "I fell for this because I was

 4      greedy."

 5             I was trying to earn money in what I thought

 6      was a viable, safe alternative to traditional

 7      savings account, and that was money I was going to

 8      give to my children and grandchildren.

 9             Or, I thought that I was going to increase my

10      savings account so that I could actually retire

11      safely.

12             And I want to stress that the scam entities

13      that I'm talking about, they are not actual

14      cryptocurrency exchange that -- exchanges that are

15      operating and not registered.

16             They are simply a Telegram phone number,

17      a website, and advertising on Facebook.

18             No entity ever existed, no cryptocurrency

19      exchange ever existed.  It was fraud from the onset.

20             What I've seen, particularly in Brooklyn that

21      has immigrant communities or communities where a

22      particular language is spoken, is that fraudsters

23      are finding them in an increasingly targeted way by

24      running advertisements on Facebook in a specific

25      language to target that specific community.







                                                             109
 1             That helps to build trust, which also lends

 2      to the betrayal that comes when the scam is

 3      unraveled.

 4             A large part of my day-to-day is not actually

 5      going into the grand jury and arresting people

 6      because these scammers are almost exclusively

 7      overseas.

 8             A large part of my day is spent talking to

 9      victims, and explaining why I am so sorry, but

10      there's nothing that I can do as a state and local

11      prosecutor.

12             I try to give them information because

13      information is closure and protection.

14             I try to explain how their money, you know,

15      disappeared, you know, within five seconds of the

16      first send.

17             I try to offer them the resources of the

18      Victim Services Unit of the Brooklyn DA's Office,

19      and I try to help them protect themselves against

20      what we call, "secondary," or "follow-up scam,"

21      where there are scammers, knowing that this victim

22      has already been a target.  They follow up a short

23      time later and they say that they're from a recovery

24      service.

25             So I tell them, like clockwork, you will get







                                                             110
 1      a call in two weeks from a recovery service.  It's a

 2      scam.  If you have any doubts, just call me back and

 3      I can tell you again.

 4             So there's a huge social services, I would

 5      say, component to my work as well.

 6             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

 7             Senator May, I don't know if you have --

 8             SENATOR MAY:  No, I don't.

 9             SENATOR MYRIE:  Okay.

10             SENATOR MAY:  Sorry that I missed a lot of

11      your testimony.

12             SENATOR MYRIE:  Well, let me thank all of you

13      for your testimony, and thank you for your continued

14      work.

15             And we appreciate the feedback, and we'll be

16      taking it all into consideration.

17             Thank you again.

18             DA LEE C. KINDLON:  Thank you.

19             SENATOR MYRIE:  Okay, the next panel.

20             Just before you testify, just say who you are

21      and your organization, and then take it away.

22             RICHARD BOURAS:  Thank you very much,

23      Chairmans Murray and May.

24             My name is Richard Bouras.  I'm part of the

25      Investigations and Intelligence Solutions team for







                                                             111
 1      Chainalysis Government Solutions, where we harness

 2      transparency of blockchains for, like, governments,

 3      banks, and businesses, to have the data they need

 4      for this new digital economy to thrive.

 5             We track cryptocurrency used by illicit

 6      actors, such as those carrying out investment

 7      impersonation scams; provide data on their financial

 8      activity to private and public-sector customers,

 9      including the U.S. public sector.

10             In each of the past five years, scam

11      operators have received over $12 billion in

12      cryptocurrency payments, and 2025 is estimated to

13      have been a record year for these scam revenues.

14             Our data shows at least $14 billion where the

15      cryptocurrency was scammed globally.  We actually

16      expect that figure to exceed $17 billion as we

17      continue to retroactively identify more scams.

18             Overall scam inflows have also surged,

19      particularly through impersonation techniques that

20      saw a staggering 1400 percent year-over-year growth

21      as fraudsters leverage AI to target victims more

22      effectively than ever before.

23             Our analysis reveals that, on average, scams

24      with on-chain links to AI vendors extract

25      $3.2 million per operation, compared to $719,000 per







                                                             112
 1      operation without those on-chain AI links.  That's

 2      4 1/2 times more revenue per a scam.

 3             This suggests both higher operational

 4      efficiency and, potentially, broader victim reach.

 5             This increased transaction volume indicates

 6      that AI is enabling scammers to reach and manage

 7      more victims simultaneously, but also making the

 8      larger industrialized scams more persuasive.

 9             Cryptocurrencies are the financial rails of

10      choice for scammers for the same reasons legitimate

11      users use them.  Transactions are cross-borders and

12      instantaneous.

13             But I'm here today to emphasize that

14      fraudsters use of cryptocurrency should place them

15      at a fundamental disadvantage, given the

16      traceability and freezability of many of these

17      assets.

18             At Chainalysis we analyze the transaction

19      data from blockchain networks to provide clear

20      visual representation of scam networks and

21      laundering activities, a level of transparency that

22      isn't possible in traditional forms of value

23      transfer.

24             With this blockchain intelligence, law

25      enforcement and regulatory bodies can disrupt these







                                                             113
 1      networks, cut them off from the global financial

 2      system, with sanctions and asset seizures.

 3             Blockchain analytics offers unique

 4      opportunities to trace proceeds of crimes, identify

 5      additional victims, and partner with the private

 6      sector to disrupt illicit networks and pursue

 7      restitution rather than relying on those one-off

 8      criminal investigations.

 9             However, despite the potential for

10      disruption, scammers are exploiting the disjointed

11      and reactive nature of how the public and private

12      sectors respond to scams.

13             This crisis requires a unified and

14      technology-enabled response, preventing New Yorkers

15      from engaging with scams altogether, and identifying

16      and dismantling the groups responsible for

17      perpetrating these scams.

18             As such, we have two recommendations.  These

19      include:

20             One:  Leveraging advanced technology as to

21      combat scammers' growing sophistication and prevent

22      remediate -- and remediate scams.

23             Too often, scam victims are turned away from

24      local authorities who are ill-equipped to properly

25      assist crytpo-enabled crimes.







                                                             114
 1             Addressing the challenge also demands a

 2      paradigm shift from reactive enforcement to

 3      proactive disruption through AI-powered

 4      fraud-prevention technology to identify scammers

 5      before they meet their victims.

 6             Tools like Chainalysis's Alterya provides

 7      realtime proactive fraud protection for exchanges,

 8      blockchains, and wallet providers.

 9             Alterya has already helped top crypto

10      exchanges decrease fraud by up to 60 percent,

11      reduced scam-related disputes, and improved the

12      efficiency of manual operations.

13             Alterya utilizes artificial technology and

14      other advanced techniques to identify scam

15      activities across various online sources, enabling

16      large-scale early upstream detection of these scams.

17             Over the past year, Alterya has prevented

18      more than $300 million in losses by supporting

19      customers and proactively reducing fraud.

20             This is what the future of combating scams

21      looks like.

22             Our adversaries are leveraging AI to rob

23      Americans of their life savings, and we must

24      leverage that technology to beat them at their own

25      game.







                                                             115
 1             Second:  Provide legislation and guidance to

 2      financial institutions and crypto businesses to help

 3      them intervene when identifying a potential scam.

 4             New York's DFS has, for years, been at the

 5      forefront of regulating digital asset and

 6      cryptocurrency businesses.

 7             Continuing their leadership in this space by

 8      providing clear and consistent guidelines could help

 9      firms navigate when and how they can slow, block, or

10      scrutinize suspicious scam transactions, and what

11      forms of friction are appropriate without

12      overreaching.

13             Further, crypto ATMs continue to remain a

14      critical input for scammers who often instruct

15      victims to convert cash into cryptocurrency at these

16      kiosks before funds are quickly transferred.

17             Increased penalties like the ones recently

18      proposed in the CRYPTO Act would provide victims and

19      law enforcement agencies greater recourse to shut

20      down and prosecute unlicensed ATM operators and

21      other virtual asset service providers not complying

22      with the New York bit license requirements.

23             Again, thank you for this opportunity to

24      provide testimony on this important topic.

25             We look forward to partnering with you on the







                                                             116
 1      initiatives to better protect New Yorkers.

 2             ARI REDBORD:  Chair Myrie, Chair May, members

 3      of the committee, thank you for the opportunity to

 4      testify today on an issue directly impacting

 5      families, retirees, and small businesses across

 6      New York.

 7             My name is Ari Redbord.  I'm the global head

 8      of policy at TRM Labs, where we work with federal,

 9      state, and local law enforcement, regulators,

10      financial institutions, and national security

11      agencies in New York, and globally, to detect,

12      investigate, and disrupt illicit activity in the

13      digital asset ecosystem and beyond.

14             Before joining TRM, I served for more than a

15      decade as a federal prosecutor at the Department of

16      Justice, and later as a senior treasury official at

17      the U.S. Department of Treasury's Office of

18      Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, confronting

19      terrorist financiers, sanctions evaders, narcotics

20      traffickers, and transnational criminal enterprises.

21             I do not say this lightly:  The

22      industrialization of scam networks, so-called

23      "pig butchering" schemes, targeting New Yorkers

24      is the most pervasive and economically destructive

25      financial crime threat I have encountered in my







                                                             117
 1      career.

 2             New York sits at the center of global

 3      finance, and that centrality brings exposure.

 4             What we face is not simply more fraud, but a

 5      structural shift in how exploitation is engineered

 6      and scaled.

 7             Organized scam networks now operate with the

 8      discipline and reach of multinational corporations.

 9             The consequence -- the consequences are

10      immediate and they are deeply personal.

11             Retirees lose their life savings.

12             Families absorb devastating losses.

13             Small businesses see operating capital

14      vanish.

15             This is economic violence at scale.

16             The numbers underscore the urgency.

17             TRM's 2026 crypto crime report estimates that

18      approximately $35 billion float into

19      cryptocurrency-related fraud schemes in 2025 with

20      only about 15 percent of victims reporting.

21             The true impact is far higher.

22             In New York alone, TRM data shows more than

23      100 million in crypto-related fraud in 2025, meaning

24      the real damage across the state is significantly

25      greater given chronic underreporting.







                                                             118
 1             Artificial intelligence is accelerating these

 2      schemes.

 3             Through Chainabuse, TRM's global scam

 4      reporting platform, we have documented a more than

 5      500 percent increase in AI-linked scam activity over

 6      the past year.

 7             Deep-fake impersonations, AI-generated

 8      financial advisers, and automated engagement tools

 9      expand scale and credibility.

10             AI also compresses laundering timelines,

11      moving funds across chains within days.

12             Although these networks are global,

13      enforcement begins at the precinct.

14             When a victim walks into an NYPD station

15      house with screenshots and transaction

16      confirmations, the investigative clock is already

17      running.

18             A wallet address and transaction hash anchor

19      tracing on a public ledger.

20             If those identifiers are not captured and

21      escalated immediately to investigators equipped with

22      blockchain intelligence tools, like TRM, recovery

23      prospects decline rapidly.

24             Meeting the moment requires tools and it

25      requires training.







                                                             119
 1             Blockchain intelligence capabilities must be

 2      deployed across NYPD and district attorney offices

 3      statewide.

 4             Digital asset literacy should be mandatory in

 5      the NYPD academy so every officer can identify and

 6      preserve blockchain-based evidence.

 7             Detectives and assistant district attorneys

 8      must be trained to translate on-chain tracing into

 9      admissible courtroom-ready evidence.

10             New York has shown already what specialized

11      capacity can achieve.

12             Under Brooklyn District Attorney

13      Eric Gonzales, prosecutors have built meaningful

14      blockchain investigative capability with leaders,

15      such as Assistant District Attorney Alona Katz,

16      integrating victim narratives, and on-chain analysis

17      into cohesive prosecutions.

18             That expertise must be scaled statewide.

19             The Rip-Off Act strengthens this response by

20      aligning criminal penalties with the scale of

21      AI-enabled fraud, and ensuring blockchain-derived

22      records can be effectively presented in grand jury

23      proceedings.

24             New York has always met evolving financial

25      threats with innovation and resolve.







                                                             120
 1             We must use technology for good, equipping

 2      our officers and prosecutors with the tools to match

 3      the speed and sophistication of this threat.

 4             At TRM, we are here to support that mission.

 5             Thank you, and I look forward to your

 6      questions.

 7             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

 8             Senator May?

 9             SENATOR MAY:  Yeah, thank you.

10             Thank you, both.

11             I feel like I'm learning so much here.

12             Mr. Bouras, I wanted to talk about the crypto

13      ATM issue that you raised.

14             As the Consumer Protection Chair, I'm always

15      thinking from the consumer's viewpoint.

16             Like, what signals are there?

17             I mean, I honestly am nervous about using

18      ATMs in general, because I know there are ways to,

19      you know, scam people with that technology in

20      general.

21             But with crypto ATMs, I've never used one.

22             But I'm wondering, what sign posts or

23      guidelines are there for the consumer to be able to

24      check if it's a legitimate one?

25             RICHARD BOURAS:  Thank you.







                                                             121
 1             So there's a number of posts.

 2             One is just going to be, signs can be up on

 3      the legitimate licensed ATM, saying, like:  Please

 4      watch out.  Is this a scam?  Do you know who you are

 5      sending to?  Have you ever even spoken to this

 6      person before?

 7             You know, and so they kind of have those

 8      warnings, both in signs on them, as well as while

 9      you're going through the operations themselves.

10             Other things to look at, too, is going to be,

11      just with, you know, the registration and licensing,

12      what sort of verifications do you need when you're

13      using that ATM?

14             If they're telling you that you can send

15      thousands of dollars without ever having to provide

16      any sort of, you know, license or registration, and,

17      just, you don't even need to provide an e-mail, sort

18      of thing, [indiscernible] -- then it is -- it should

19      kind of like raise those alarm bells with them, that

20      this isn't normal.

21             You have to give some sort of ID.  Even to a

22      traditional ATM, you're putting in your debit card,

23      you're putting in something, that has been checked

24      before.

25             And if these aren't asking you for anything,







                                                             122
 1      it's likely unlicensed, then.

 2             SENATOR MAY:  So is there -- is it just up to

 3      whoever put the ATM there, to put this signage on

 4      there, or is there -- are there any kind of

 5      requirements?  Should there be?

 6             Is there something we should be doing?

 7             RICHARD BOURAS:  Yes, there should definitely

 8      be requirements.  And part of that is part of DFS's

 9      registration.

10             And I think a lot of that, too, will now come

11      from, when we talk about the CRYPTO Act, of giving

12      that, you know, those legal teeth to it, of really

13      saying, like, now it is a criminal issue as well.

14             Different states have different regulations,

15      both to the limit that can be done per transaction,

16      as well as the type of KYC requirements.

17             You can also look at things then that can be

18      registered on the websites as well.

19             SENATOR MAY:  Okay.  Thanks.

20             ARI REDBORD:  If I may just, sort of really

21      quickly, on that question, because it's a great one?

22             At TRM we see about double the amount of

23      illicit activity associated with ATMs as we do to

24      the broader ecosystem.

25             So there is no question it's a problem and it







                                                             123
 1      should be a focus.

 2             I think the challenge is, how do you allow --

 3      ensure that lawful users have access to this

 4      technology and stop bad actors?

 5             And I think with these machines in

 6      particular, what's so important is to ensure that

 7      they have the licensing which really comes with all

 8      the compliance controls.  Right?

 9             You are required to be using blockchain

10      intelligence tools today as a New York DFS-licensed

11      entity; that you are -- you know, that you have the

12      policies and procedures in place, that you are doing

13      compliance.

14             So I think so much of this comes down to that

15      sort of initial licensing determination, and are

16      these entities you should be transacting with.

17             SENATOR MAY:  Right.

18             Thank you.

19             And, Mr. Redbord, I appreciated your term,

20      "economic violence."

21             I feel like that's -- we don't think about it

22      that much, but that really is what it feels like

23      when you get scammed.

24             ARI REDBORD:  One thing quickly on that

25      point, if you don't mind, and that is, I think one







                                                             124
 1      thing that's been missed to some extent in the

 2      conversations today, is that these are truly global

 3      organizations.  This is organized crime.

 4             Much of it is in Southeast Asia; but, now,

 5      more and more all over the world, in the

 6      Middle East, in Africa.  And they are attacking, in

 7      many cases, U.S. persons and New Yorkers at scale.

 8             This is very different than any question to

 9      me around licensing determinations or the great work

10      that New York DFS is doing around the bit license.

11             There is a growing lawful ecosystem.

12             These are just scammers.

13             SENATOR MAY:  Yeah.

14             ARI REDBORD:  And we need to target them not

15      just with crypto tracing.  We need to put all the

16      tools in NYPD hands and prosecutors, as I mentioned.

17      But this is a national and global security moment.

18             And when we have this conversation in front

19      of the federal government, money -- much of it is

20      asking to ensure that we have the national security

21      tools and capabilities in place to actually go after

22      these bad actors globally.

23             SENATOR MAY:  Right.  I don't disagree.

24             But I'm more focused on, like, what happens

25      at the personal level.







                                                             125
 1             So one thing you mentioned was training

 2      for -- digital asset literacy training for police.

 3             Did you have in mind for all, like,

 4      rank-and-file police, or detectives, or, like, you

 5      know, what level do you think --

 6             ARI REDBORD:  It's a great question.

 7             And it can certainly be triaged I think for

 8      everyone.

 9             Look, if every crime is a financial crime,

10      and cryptocurrencies are going to be used in more

11      and more crimes, to include scams and other types of

12      activity, then that means the second you walk in

13      that precinct door with those screenshots, with

14      those transaction hashes, the person that you're

15      talking to, that intake officer, should know, have a

16      sense, of what you're talking about.

17             Hopefully, they were trained at the academy

18      on it.

19             But then, hopefully, they can get you right

20      away to someone who has access to the tools, who has

21      deep training, who can jump into TRM's platform and

22      start to track and trace the flow of funds.

23             So I would say, in a perfect world, it would

24      be a mandatory training across NYPD, but

25      understanding, like, we're in a triage moment with







                                                             126
 1      resourcing.  But as many as possible.

 2             SENATOR MAY:  And I represent upstate, so,

 3      you know, it -- yeah, the resources aren't there

 4      for -- necessarily.

 5             But I hear you.

 6             On the other side of things, you talked about

 7      only 15 percent of victims reporting.

 8             Like, how do we raise that number?

 9             And I will say, as someone who was

10      victimized, you're embarrassed, you feel like an

11      idiot.  It's, like, hard to bring yourself to go and

12      report something where you've been scammed.

13             But what kind of tools are there out there?

14             And how can we, as a state government, be

15      making sure that those are available to people, to

16      really make sure that --

17             ARI REDBORD:  It's really the most --

18             SENATOR MAY:  -- more people report?

19             ARI REDBORD:  It's really the most important

20      question.

21             And I thought Alona's testimony was actually

22      some of the most beautifully I've ever heard

23      articulated on this topic and working with victims.

24             I would say that a massive public campaign

25      around scams is something that we've been talking







                                                             127
 1      about at a federal level, but certainly at a state

 2      level makes sense.

 3             People should be able to, as quickly as

 4      possible, identify themselves as a victim, because

 5      I think part of the lack of reporting comes from,

 6      sort of, not knowing exactly what's happening to you

 7      in that moment.

 8             SENATOR MAY:  Right.

 9             ARI REDBORD:  But there's that other piece,

10      the shame piece, and it is very, very real.

11             And my feeling is that part of that training

12      would be for officers to understand more and more,

13      sort of, what a victim is going through.

14             We want to meet people where they are.

15             When I was a prosecutor, for a long time

16      I did domestic violence cases, and we talked about

17      victim-centered approach.

18             It's as important to take in these cases.

19             So I think it's a massive public awareness

20      campaign, as well as ensuring that when you are

21      engaging with law enforcement, that it's a good

22      experience.

23             I mentioned we run a website called

24      Chainabuse.com, which is just open source.  We

25      encourage people to make sure that they are







                                                             128
 1      reporting there.  There's a portal to report

 2      directly to law enforcement through there.

 3             So there's all kinds of things that can be

 4      done, but I think a lot of this is awareness.

 5             SENATOR MAY:  Yeah, okay.  Thank you.

 6             RICHARD BOURAS:  I would also --

 7             SENATOR MAY:  We will be hearing from AARP

 8      next --

 9             RICHARD BOURAS:  I would also like to add --

10             SENATOR MAY:  -- and I know they are very

11      involved in that, too.

12             RICHARD BOURAS:  -- that -- [indiscernible]

13      to that, there are also the parts that people don't

14      report because they simply do not realize yet, with

15      some of these scams being long-term scams, that

16      they're actually victims yet.

17             We've seen in, you know, what we call

18      "pig butchering," where we'll -- they might even get

19      payouts, you know, initially, where it looks like

20      they are making money.  So then they start to, you

21      know, contribute more and more money, and they might

22      think everything is okay.

23             There's plenty of, you know, fraudulent

24      AI images of them showing, you know, different

25      balance transfers, and different accounting, "This







                                                             129
 1      is your account balance now," on these entire

 2      websites, where they think they're actually looking

 3      at their accounts, when nothing is there.

 4             So I think also working with the private

 5      sector, too, when we're identifying these frauds.

 6      Work with public and private to identify that these

 7      are -- this is now a known and identified scam.

 8             We're working with them so they can reach out

 9      to their -- like, their clients that might be

10      utilizing this, and say, Hey, by the way, this --

11      you might actually be a scam here.

12             And getting that victim knowledge out there

13      that way as well.

14             SENATOR MAY:  All right.

15             Thank you.

16             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, Senator May.

17             Senator Murray.

18             SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you, Chair.

19             And I apologize for scooting in in between.

20             But I had the same thing written down,

21      15 percent, I mean, and why so low?

22             But I think we know.

23             But with that said, is there a particular

24      target?

25             And is it because, maybe, are we targeting







                                                             130
 1      seniors more, because they're embarrassed, or don't

 2      want to?  Or are they targeting younger because

 3      maybe they don't realize it?

 4             Is there a particular target?

 5             ARI REDBORD:  There's really an extraordinary

 6      range, and it's interesting.

 7             I think we think of this, there's an

 8      elder-fraud component to it.

 9             But in these specific, sort of, pig

10      butchering scams start out as a romance scam and

11      ultimately end up as an investment scam.

12             It is just a wide array of different types of

13      people.

14             So in my view, the way we would need to do

15      this is to meet all of those different demographics

16      where they are, whether it is our elderly

17      population.  But young people, who are more

18      crypto-savvy, have that sort of FOMO that the

19      attorney general's office talked about earlier in

20      the hearing.

21             Right?

22             So it is really a mix of people, which makes

23      this even more dangerous, because that's when you

24      can get to that 35 billion globally, the 100 million

25      in New York.







                                                             131
 1             It is not a subset.  It is a large group.

 2             SENATOR MURRAY:  And that was my other

 3      question.

 4             As you had mentioned, this is global.

 5             But is New York one of the top targets?

 6             ARI REDBORD:  So New York is always a top

 7      target when it comes to the fact that it's a

 8      financial center, and just population-wise.

 9             We see New York as one of the -- sort of the

10      top states, along with Massachusetts and others,

11      when it comes to really targeted -- these targeted

12      pig butchering types of outreach.

13             I think the 100 million is extraordinary.

14      But when you think about the fact that that only

15      accounts for 15 percent or so of reports, that's

16      when you get to some really dangerous territory.

17             SENATOR MURRAY:  Wow, yeah, good point.

18             Thank you.

19             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, Senator Murray.

20             So if we can, just to step back for a second,

21      I mentioned this at an earlier panel, about those of

22      us who are somewhat familiar with the cryptocurrency

23      space, who sort of speak fluently about it.  But

24      some of the -- what we feel are intuitive things can

25      be lost on it.







                                                             132
 1             So if we can -- I know we have said what

 2      "pig butchering" is.  It's kind of a stark term that

 3      I don't think most people are aware what that is.

 4             So to either of you, just for the record, to

 5      explain what that type of scheme is.

 6             ARI REDBORD:  Yeah, happy to do it.

 7             It really is that sort of mix of romance and

 8      an investment fraud.

 9             Oftentimes, a bad actor will reach out -- we

10      all get these every day; right? -- "Hey, how you

11      doing?" to your text message or social media, and

12      we'll start a conversation.  And, ultimately, that

13      conversation will end up romantic in nature.

14             It could take weeks to grow, but then

15      ultimately ends up with some kind of question around

16      investment:  I made a great investment.  Would you

17      be interested in this?

18             The person makes that investment.  Oftentimes

19      there's a larger return sent back, to start to

20      really create that believability.  Oftentimes the

21      platform looks very legitimate.  Maybe it's actually

22      a fake platform based on a real one.

23             And then, ultimately, after the victim sends

24      larger and larger amounts of funds, that's when --

25      as horrible of a term as it is, that's when the







                                                             133
 1      "butchering" takes place; steal all the funds and

 2      they're gone.

 3             And I thought a great point earlier, about

 4      the fact that, oftentimes, the victim doesn't know

 5      for some time, because you really can't wrap your

 6      head around it.

 7             And there's just been a proliferation of

 8      these types of cases.  And so many of them are

 9      coming from, you know, places in Southeast Asia;

10      Cambodia, Laos, Viet Nam, Myanmar.

11             And what this has turned into is wealth

12      transfer from lawful Americans to criminal networks

13      in Southeast Asia and beyond.

14             RICHARD BOURAS:  Yeah, that's a great point.

15             And to add to that, too:  When we're talking

16      about those victims, and how long this has gone on,

17      and how realistic it seems, you will even get to the

18      point where, when they are notified that this might

19      be, you know, a potential pig butchering scam, like,

20      you will get pushback, where they're, like, No.

21             They are fully still invested in this.

22      They -- again, it could be romantic.  It could be

23      just be the investment.  They've may have gotten

24      actual, you know, funds back initially and they've

25      seen this.







                                                             134
 1             And so it's almost, you know, trying to

 2      convince them.

 3             That is part of the fight initially, is

 4      really trying to get them to understand that this --

 5      they are a part of this victim.

 6             SENATOR MYRIE:  And we've been talking and

 7      focusing on the illicit activity in this space.

 8             And, you know, I think that there is --

 9      anytime, when we are proposing either increased

10      regulation or proposing new legislation, to any

11      industry, there is, I think, natural pushback on

12      what that should look like, and are we going too

13      far?  Are we interfering in sort of the natural

14      occurrence of what that industry is doing?

15             And I'm hoping that you can clarify for us

16      whether your role in this ecosystem interferes with

17      sort of the inherently good things that happen in

18      cryptocurrency?

19             And what, if anything, we should be mindful

20      of, as we're stepping into this space, to try to

21      protect victims?

22             RICHARD BOURAS:  Yeah, I'd say, not at all.

23             You know, our goal is to remove this illicit

24      finance, this fear of, you know, crypto being just,

25      you know, for, essentially, any sort of illicit







                                                             135
 1      means.  So that way, more people feel comfortable

 2      with it, and it broadens it out.

 3             Again, we work with both U.S. public sector

 4      and private sector, because we want -- we want, you

 5      know, the regulatory agencies, we want the law

 6      enforcement agencies, to have this data so that they

 7      can effectively go after the bad guys here.

 8             And at the same time, we also want the

 9      private sector to know, that if you're going to be

10      held to these standards, you also have this data so

11      that you can do the proper compliance, you can meet

12      those regulators, and understand exactly what it's

13      going to do to protect your clients, so you can

14      thrive in this.

15             You know, banks have had, you know, plenty of

16      regulation over the years, and they have grown

17      plenty.  They have not seen any, you know, issues

18      with this.

19             And we see the same thing going from the

20      cryptocurrency industry as well.

21             ARI REDBORD:  If I may just add:  We put out

22      a report recently that said it was a record-setting

23      year for crypto-related crime, about 158 billion.

24             That still accounts for about 1.2 percent of

25      overall activity.







                                                             136
 1             But that 1.2 percent is what keeps me up at

 2      night because it's about people losing their life

 3      savings.

 4             So I think the challenge for this panel, and

 5      beyond, is how do we ensure that lawful users have

 6      access to truly transformative technology?

 7             Right?

 8             Cross-border value transfer at the speed of

 9      the Internet, for remittances, for humanitarian aid,

10      for payments at scale, and yet at the same time,

11      stop bad actors.

12             And to me that means a couple things.

13             One, it means ensuring that law enforcement

14      have the tools and the training they need to go

15      after that -- those bad actors.

16             And to ensure that lawful entities are not

17      overregulated, but are required to act like any

18      regulated entity is.  Have deep compliance controls

19      in place.

20             So I think that that is the challenge, is how

21      do we sort of walk that line?

22             But I think it's primarily going after the

23      bad actors in the ecosystem who make up this illicit

24      underbelly that still is a relatively small

25      percentage of overall illicit activity -- of overall







                                                             137
 1      activity.

 2             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, and I appreciate

 3      that.

 4             And I will lastly ask, and, again, this is

 5      for the edification of the public and for the

 6      record, so that we can know:

 7             Can you talk about the mechanics of the

 8      blockchain, and what makes it different than

 9      traditional financial institutions.

10             You are able to see every transaction,

11      literally, every transaction, on the chain.  But

12      people are still able to get away with fraudulent

13      activity.

14             And I think both of those things happening at

15      the same time is a little hard for the public to

16      understand.

17             So if you can give us just some insight into

18      that, and what we need to do.

19             ARI REDBORD:  Happy to kick that one off.

20             So, look, the -- every transaction that

21      occurs in cryptocurrency is on a traceable,

22      trackable, immutable public ledger.

23             When I was a prosecutor, I was investigating

24      cases involving both cash smuggling and networks;

25      the hawalas and shell companies and high-value art.







                                                             138
 1             There were no TRM to trace and track the flow

 2      of those funds.

 3             The challenge, though, is bad actors can now

 4      move larger amounts of funds faster than ever

 5      before.  And so much of this comes down to speed.

 6             And that is why it's so important, when you

 7      have that intake at the precinct, that that officer

 8      there is moving fast to that detective and beyond.

 9             That's why the importance of public-private

10      partnerships; that we are able to move as fast as

11      these bad actors.  That we're integrating AI into

12      the tools that we're using because bad actors are

13      using AI to move faster and faster.

14             So the promise of the technology, this idea

15      of it, you can now move larger amounts of funds

16      cross-border faster than ever before, is also why

17      bad actors are taking advantage of it.

18             But as you know, bad actors are always early

19      adopters of transformative technology.

20             And it's, like, how do we stop them to allow

21      lawful users to really have the promise of it?

22             RICHARD BOURAS:  And to add to your point

23      about how the blockchain really works, it really

24      goes down into that -- not the anonymity of it, but

25      the pseudonymity of it.







                                                             139
 1             So every -- so we said every transaction is

 2      recorded publicly; however, it won't just be

 3      necessarily, like, my name going to Ari, or any of

 4      that.  It will just be a lot of, you know, numbers

 5      and letters in these long strings of digits, you

 6      know, going back and it shows that.

 7             Where the real work comes from is how we now

 8      can identify it, how we work to attribute who those

 9      belong to.

10             So, you know, we have, you know, intelligence

11      teams that are going out and trying to find

12      everything; whether it be from, you know, those

13      private partnerships telling us, like, These are all

14      of our addresses on the blockchains.

15             So we now know this is, you know, the

16      legitimate exchange, this is the Coinbase of the

17      world, and every like that.

18             So our intelligence team is going out and

19      trying to find these bad actors.  They are going

20      onto the dark-end markets, on a Telegraph, trying to

21      see, Oh, this is a fentanyl dealership right here.

22      This is someone trying to sell fraudulent paperwork.

23      This is something, this is a scam.

24             And now that they've given us these addresses

25      here, so we can now connect those right now to







                                                             140
 1      [indiscernible].  So, that way, when we're looking

 2      in the tools, you know, law enforcement, regulatory

 3      agencies, aren't just seeing this long string of

 4      digits that really doesn't mean anything to them at

 5      that point.

 6             They can say, Oh, wait.  This belongs to

 7      Illicit Actor A.  This is how we know it.

 8             SENATOR MYRIE:  Great.

 9             Thank you both very much for your time, and

10      for your expertise.

11             And I'm sure the committee will be in contact

12      with further questions.

13             ARI REDBORD:  Looking forward to it.

14             Thank you so much.

15             RICHARD BOURAS:  Thank you.

16             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

17             Okay.  We will next hear from AARP.

18             Whenever you're ready.

19             KRISTEN McMANUS:  Thank you.

20             So thank you, Senator Myrie, Senator May,

21      Senator Murray.

22             I'm Kristen McManus.  I'm the director of

23      government affairs and advocacy with AARP New York.

24             If you're not familiar with AARP, we are a

25      social mission organization that prioritizes the







                                                             141
 1      needs of the 50-plus.

 2             And I appreciate the opportunity to testify

 3      today because elder financial exploitation and scams

 4      and fraud that impact older adults is a very serious

 5      and growing concern.

 6             We have data from the latest FBI report that

 7      shows that elder fraud saw a reported increase in

 8      about 50 percent, and the associated losses also

 9      increased around that same number, I think it's

10      43 percent.

11             This is the equivalent of older New Yorkers

12      losing about $30,000 an hour to scams and fraud.

13             And, also, this is really just the tip of the

14      iceberg.  There are so many reports, about half,

15      that don't include the age of the victim.

16             And also we know that some people are too

17      embarrassed to report, or they have no idea that

18      they should be reporting that they were a victim, or

19      really don't see the point in doing it.

20             So this is like really just the tip of the

21      iceberg.

22             We -- New York currently ranks sixth among

23      all top states in elder fraud.  Not a good list to

24      be at the top of.

25             And we know that people can be victims of







                                                             142
 1      scams at any age.  But it's particularly harmful

 2      when it happens to older adults, because they have

 3      spent their whole lives building their nest egg or

 4      they have home equity that these thieves are trying

 5      to tap into.  And it's much more difficult for them

 6      to find the financial recourse to make themselves

 7      whole.

 8             You know, an 85-year-old who loses all of her

 9      life savings really has very limited ability to go

10      back to work and try to make that money back.

11             We have a number of recommendations.

12             I first want to just give thanks to

13      Senator Myrie for both the SCAM Act and your efforts

14      on deed theft, particularly with the focus on how

15      these impact older adults, and how we know that they

16      can be sometimes specifically targeted in these

17      scams.

18             But we think one of the most effective ways

19      to make sure that older adults don't fall victim to

20      scams is to stop the money from leaving their

21      accounts in the first place.

22             Senator Cleare has a bill that would require

23      training for bank tellers, broker-dealers,

24      investment advisers, to recognize the signs of elder

25      financial exploitation, and then allow those







                                                             143
 1      financial institution employees to place a hold on a

 2      specific transaction.  This gives time for it to be

 3      reported to law enforcement and/or adult protective

 4      services.  And sometimes that hold is just enough

 5      time for the older adult to realize, like,

 6      "Something was off with this in my gut.  This is a

 7      scam."  And make sure that money doesn't leave in

 8      the first place.

 9             And we've seen 40 other states have this for

10      broker-dealers and investment advisers, and about

11      26 for bank tellers.

12             And we've seen this be successful in

13      intercepting some of the most egregious forms of

14      fraud and scams, because we know that sometimes it's

15      somebody that they know, a caregiver or a loved one,

16      who is trying to coax them into giving them money.

17             Sometimes people come into the bank and

18      they're on the phone with the scammer who's walking

19      them through what to say and what to do, to be able

20      to get this cash.

21             We also have growing concerns around crypto

22      fraud, and we've heard a lot about that today.

23             Sometimes it's the fraudulent crypto

24      investments, but, also, sometimes it's just the

25      vehicle for the scam.







                                                             144
 1             So we hear of people who are taking money out

 2      and putting it -- you know, handing it over to a

 3      courier.

 4             I think the crypto kiosk is now the new

 5      vehicle for that.  We see some people putting in

 6      tens of thousands of dollars, like their entire life

 7      savings, into these crypto kiosks.  And it's

 8      happening around country.

 9             So we have some recommendations around that.

10             Making sure that we're imposing daily

11      transaction limits at the crypto kiosks.  And,

12      perhaps, even finding a way to let somebody get that

13      money back within a certain amount of time, because

14      the money is in the machine; so if it's within a

15      certain time frame.

16             I see that I'm running out of time, so I have

17      just a few more that I want to quickly mention.

18             We also are really grateful for the

19      legislature for updating the General Business Law

20      around unfair, deceptive, and abusive acts and

21      practices.

22             But we do think that consumers -- individual

23      consumers need a private right of action or some

24      sort of mechanism where they can go after these bad

25      actors.







                                                             145
 1             And I just want to quickly plug that AARP has

 2      an entirely free resource.  You do not need to be a

 3      member; anybody can use it.  It's called the Fraud

 4      Watch Network.  It keeps you up to date on all the

 5      latest frauds and scams.  It gives you tips on what

 6      to do if you or somebody that you know has been

 7      scammed; tells you how to report them.

 8             And it just has a ton of good information to

 9      keep people educated.

10             Thank you.

11             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

12             Senator May?

13             SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.

14             I have to run.

15             But I just want to thank you and AARP for

16      everything you do in this space, because I just know

17      that you all are always thinking.

18             I mean, the scams change day by day by day,

19      and you guys are on top of that, and really helping

20      people feel comfortable about reporting, and

21      recognizing what the problems are.

22             And I just want to thank you for that.

23             And, yeah, the private right of action,

24      I agree with you about that.

25             I think we haggled about that last year.  But







                                                             146
 1      we'll keep working on it, trying to make sure that

 2      that's available for consumers, because we need it.

 3             KRISTEN McMANUS:  Thank you.

 4             SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.

 5             KRISTEN McMANUS:  Thanks, Senator.

 6             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, Senator May.

 7             Senator Murray?

 8             SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you, Chair.

 9             And thank you for coming.

10             And, yeah, this is -- obviously, it's a huge

11      issue.

12             And thank you for the fraud watch network

13      tip.  I'd like to share, because I think education

14      is the key.  I think it's getting information out

15      there and getting people informed.

16             As far as the limitations, I will -- I like

17      the idea, but I also have concerns, and I'd like

18      your thoughts on this.

19             So, recently, I had an issue, where my bank

20      had changed the debit cards they were using, and

21      they had the chip technology and all this.

22             But I went to take money out and it was

23      denied.

24             I went to pay something in a store, it was

25      denied.







                                                             147
 1             I went to another store, it was denied.

 2             A vet bill, denied.

 3             I went, wait a minute, wait a minute.  It's

 4      not that there's not money in there.  What's the

 5      problem?

 6             I called the bank and they said, well, it's

 7      fraud.  We're concerned about fraud, so we're

 8      protecting you.

 9             And I said, But you're going too far.  You're

10      keeping me, preventing me, from getting my own

11      money.

12             Is there a danger there; can we go too far?

13             Because I agree with you, maybe a pause is

14      not a bad idea on investments, or something like

15      this.

16             But could it possibly go too far is my

17      concern?

18             What are your thoughts?

19             KRISTEN McMANUS:  What I'll say is, that

20      we've worked on this bill across the country, and

21      have not seen widespread problems like that.

22             I think part of the issue here, and what the

23      bill requires, is that you have to be notified.

24      They have to tell you that they are holding that

25      transaction.  And, again, it's just the transaction,







                                                             148
 1      it's not the entire account.

 2             So the older adults who are impacted still

 3      have access to all of their finances.  It's just

 4      that one suspicious transaction is not allowed to

 5      move forward.

 6             And I think if there are family members or

 7      somebody who is also on the account, like a trusted

 8      contact, they get that notification, also.

 9             So I think the notification here really is

10      key so the people understand why this specific

11      transaction is being held.

12             And we know a lot of that conversation

13      happens at the counter.  It's just that the teller

14      doesn't have any real ability to intervene when they

15      see something that is egregiously, obviously wrong.

16             SENATOR MURRAY:  And I think maybe education

17      on the bank levels, too, because what ended up

18      happening was, I got a hold of someone, and they

19      kept using the excuse that it was fraud.

20             It ended up, there was a problem with the

21      chip.

22             So they ended up sending a new card, and

23      everything's working fine now.

24             But they were using this excuse that it's

25      fraud protection, it's fraud protection, which







                                                             149
 1      really got me concerned about, could that possibly

 2      go too far?

 3             So maybe even an educational thing with the

 4      bank as well, on how to respond when you get these

 5      inquiries might be helpful.

 6             KRISTEN McMANUS:  Yeah, I think that's a

 7      great idea.

 8             SENATOR MURRAY:  Good.  Thank you.

 9             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, Senator Murray.

10             And I would echo Senator May's thanks for the

11      work that AARP does.

12             They do a lot of work in my district, we do a

13      lot of work together.  And so thank you for that.

14             We've heard a lot today about the reluctance

15      to come forward, and some of the -- what we've heard

16      from previous panels, just such small percentages of

17      people that report this.

18             Is there something specific about our older

19      adult population that might make them less likely to

20      come forward?

21             What have you heard?

22             What do people come to you to tell you?

23             Are there folks that come to you and don't

24      come to law enforcement, and say, you know, You're a

25      trusted entity and organization.  I trust the







                                                             150
 1      members?

 2             And if so, are there things you think we can

 3      do about that?

 4             KRISTEN McMANUS:  Yeah, I think there's

 5      education that's certainly needed so that people

 6      understand the importance of reporting.

 7             And I totally get it.  I mean, anybody can be

 8      a scam victim, truly.

 9             Like, we have somebody who does these fraud

10      education presentations for us, and almost fell

11      victim to a grandparent scam, who only realized at

12      the last minute, like, actually, I think something

13      here is wrong.

14             So it can happen to the experts.

15             And I think part of it is letting people know

16      that there could be recourse for them; not just in

17      catching the criminal, but there may be funds

18      available that can try to make them whole.  Or, how

19      just important it is to have all of the information

20      possible for law enforcement to be able to follow

21      the leads, and to prevent other people from being

22      scammed by the same bad actors.

23             SENATOR MYRIE:  Okay.  Thank you; thank you

24      for that.

25             And the low percentages and the difficulty







                                                             151
 1      right now in trying to get restitution, I think,

 2      sort of as obstacle, as you mentioned.

 3             And you put forward as a recommendation, the

 4      Senator Cleare bill, on having other actors in the

 5      system.

 6             Are there any other entities in the system

 7      that you think should play a larger role; i.e., are

 8      there our family courts or other parts of our courts

 9      that could be helpful?

10             Are there law enforcement things?

11             Are there social service things?

12             And anybody else that you think we should

13      say, Hey, you should be doing more to protect our

14      older adults?

15             KRISTEN McMANUS:  Yeah, thank you for that

16      question.

17             And I would actually say everybody.

18             New York is like the only state that does not

19      mandate reporting of elder abuse.

20             Every other state has some statute that

21      reports it.  The lists of professions vary state by

22      state.  But in our statute it's a "may," not a

23      "shall."

24             So I think that that's really important,

25      looking at who is going to be reporting this and







                                                             152
 1      making sure that they know that they have to do it.

 2             And, obviously, we can always use more

 3      funding for adult protective services, to make sure

 4      that they're able to do this work and intervene

 5      where appropriate.

 6             SENATOR MYRIE:  Great.

 7             Thank you very much for your patience and

 8      your testimony.

 9             KRISTEN McMANUS:  Thank you.

10             SENATOR MYRIE:  We're going to keep rolling.

11      We've got a couple of panels left.

12             But I think we have the next panel with us

13      here:  Mark Anderson and Charles Johnson.

14             Do we want to bring the pastor -- we're going

15      to bring the pastor up, or no?

16             OFF-CAMERA SPEAKER:  Yeah, sure.

17             SENATOR MYRIE:  Pastor, do you want to come

18      down?

19             That's quite the tie you have there, Pastor.

20             [Laughter.]

21             That's how you come testify in Albany.

22             Okay.  Whenever you're ready, take it away.

23             CHARLES JOHNSON:  Chair Myrie, Ranking

24      Members, and members of the Senate, thank you for

25      the opportunity to testify.







                                                             153
 1             My name is Charles Johnson.  I serve as the

 2      political action chair for the New York State NAACP

 3      Conference, and also under the leadership of

 4      Madam President LJoy Williams.

 5             Deed theft is a white-collar crime with

 6      devastating real-life consequences.  It involves

 7      fraudulent or coerced transfers of real-property

 8      title, often through forgery, misrepresentation, or

 9      falsified documents, and it has stripped families,

10      especially elderly homeowners, of homes and

11      generational wealth across New York.

12             This is not isolated.

13             More than 6,000 deed theft complaints have

14      been filed statewide since 2014, disproportionately

15      impacting seniors and disabled homeowners.

16             For many victims, the first sign is not a

17      warning.  It's an eviction notice, a foreclosure

18      action, or an unexpected ownership dispute.  And

19      once title is compromised, restoration is often

20      slowed and costly, creating a pipeline of

21      displacement.

22             Now, New York has taken important steps

23      recently.

24             In 2023, the State enacted a civil deed theft

25      protection, authorizing prosecutors and the office







                                                             154
 1      of the attorney general to stay evictions and

 2      foreclosures, filing notice to warn the market, void

 3      fraudulent instruments, apply civil tools to address

 4      fraud after relevant convictions, and extend

 5      remedies under the Home Equity Theft and Prevention

 6      Act.

 7             In 2024, the State criminalized deed theft as

 8      grand larceny, extending the statute of limitations,

 9      and granted the attorney general concurrent criminal

10      jurisdiction statewide.

11             Now, those reforms matter, but the NAACP's

12      position is clear:  The State must continue to

13      respond with a stronger, more coordinated approach,

14      focused on prevention, protection, and enforcement.

15             Specifically, we urge the Governor and

16      legislators to:

17             Prioritize deed theft enforcement in

18      historically targeted communities because where the

19      harm is concentrated and the impact is

20      intergenerational;

21             Strengthen elder-focused safeguards, because

22      seniors and disabled homeowners remain the most

23      frequently targeted and least equipped to fight back

24      quickly;

25             Increase funding to the homeowners protection







                                                             155
 1      program so victims can access legal help early

 2      before displacement becomes inevitable;

 3             Early warning systems and brief

 4      administrative holds.  So county clerks should

 5      provide free recording alerts, either e-mails, text

 6      messages, voice plus mail notices, whenever there's

 7      a deed, mortgage, or power of attorney is filed,

 8      paired with the authority for brief administrative

 9      recording, hold when there's -- clear red flags

10      appear;

11             LLC transparency and beneficial ownership, to

12      ensure that the LLCs cannot be hidden behind shell

13      entities, because we're noticing that, with LLCs,

14      they're masking as fraud, and are used to launder

15      ownership of stolen homes;

16             Engage in greater due diligence around lien

17      sales, where notice, fees, process gaps can

18      accelerate loss of homes and increase vulnerability

19      to fraudulent transfers;

20             And, finally, enforcement must be paired with

21      a broad awareness and education, so homeowners know

22      the warning signs, where to seek help before damage

23      is irreversible.

24             Thank you for your leadership on the issue,

25      and the NAACP New York State Conference stands ready







                                                             156
 1      to support continued reform and coordinated

 2      enforcement.

 3             Deed theft is not just theft.  It's also

 4      displacement and the destruction of

 5      intergenerational stability.

 6             I'm happy to answer any questions.

 7             Thank you.

 8             MARK ANDERSON:  Good morning, Senators.

 9             Thanks so much for having me.

10             My name is Mark Anderson.  I'm the managing

11      partner of a firm called Anderson Bowman, which is

12      based in Kew Gardens, Queens.

13             We're real estate and consumer litigators.

14             One of the reasons that I believe I was

15      invited to testify here today is because we're at

16      the forefront of a massive class-action lawsuit

17      involving manipulation of interest rates on

18      foreclosures across the state.

19             There's been reporting that's been done by

20      both Gothamist and New York Focus, that piggy-backed

21      on top of our litigation, that found that over

22      10,000 auctions that had occurred across the state

23      had manipulated the surplus monies that were

24      available in foreclosures.

25             I'm joined today by my client, Dr. Bond,







                                                             157
 1      from the Cathedral -- Citadel Cathedral in

 2      South Brooklyn.  He is one of the victims of one of

 3      these crimes.  And we intend to continue on with

 4      this class-action lawsuit.

 5             Procedurally, it's not worth going into; it's

 6      too boring.

 7             But for right now, it's a very, very

 8      hot-button issue that I really do appreciate you

 9      taking the attention to.

10             I can go through kind of the crux of the case

11      or we can just talk about it.

12             But what it boils down to is, the amount that

13      banks are allowed to charge in interest on

14      foreclosure cases is being miscalculated, and

15      they're doing it on a systematic basis and they're

16      hiding it behind the color of law.

17             And so, right now, although I do believe that

18      the law is very clear on not being able to charge

19      cumulative interest against residential

20      foreclosures, I do think that it should be more

21      clear that what they're doing is illegal.

22             So right now, the lawsuit is -- it's going

23      against the banks, the servicers, and their

24      attorneys.  And I'm looking forward to getting to

25      the bottom of all this, and I do appreciate you all







                                                             158
 1      taking the attention.

 2             I did provide some prepared remarks which

 3      kind of further explains the issue, which

 4      Senator Myrie and I have talked about --

 5             And thank you so much for the attention

 6      you've been giving it.

 7             -- because we do want to bring some clarity

 8      and some justice to individuals, and churches like

 9      Dr. Bond's.

10             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, Mark.

11             Dr. Bond, if you want to say a few words?

12             DR. MARK BOND:  I'm so glad to be here today,

13      to have this space to say something, because it's

14      even more egregious for -- in my case, because my

15      church is Citadel Cathedral, and the Lutheran Synod

16      has been adding thousands of dollars on to a pay-off

17      amount, that we couldn't even get a chance to pay it

18      off because the numbers kept shifting.

19             And then on top of all of that, after the

20      auction, they even took the surplus of $140,000.

21             So it's theft, theft of property, because

22      it's ours.

23             We have a 30-year-old congregation that will

24      be homeless unless we can do something about this.

25      ///







                                                             159
 1             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

 2             And thank you for sharing the experience.

 3             Senator Murray, I don't know if you have

 4      questions?

 5             SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you, Chair.

 6             So for the novice, give me the elevator pitch

 7      on how does it happen?

 8             First the deed theft.  But then, on top of

 9      that, obviously the banks, I mean -- well, let's go

10      to the deed theft first.

11             MARK ANDERSON:  So I should back up by

12      saying, I appreciate the testimony provided, because

13      we also litigate issues involving deed theft.

14             And we also appreciate the Foreclosure Abuse

15      Prevention Act, because it's been extremely helpful

16      in my practice area, because it has cleared up a lot

17      of what I didn't view as very vague law.  I think it

18      was actually very clear before.  But now it is

19      absolutely clear, what is and what is not a

20      time-barred mortgage.

21             So I do appreciate all the work that you guys

22      have been putting into that.

23             I'm -- let me -- let me speed back up, and

24      then -- I'm sorry, could I ask what the question was

25      again?







                                                             160
 1             SENATOR MURRAY:  So deed theft, now, you see

 2      commercials.

 3             And the reason I bring it up is because I'm

 4      wondering, and maybe some folks at home are

 5      wondering, you see the TV commercials all the time

 6      now, the radio commercials:  We'll protect you

 7      against that.

 8             And I -- and my first thought, call me a

 9      skeptic, is, is this fraud?  Like, are they -- is

10      this company real, or are they asking for money for

11      protection that I really don't need?

12             So how does it work?

13             MARK ANDERSON:  The deed theft itself?

14             SENATOR MURRAY:  First the deed theft, yes.

15             MARK ANDERSON:  Right.

16             So deed theft itself can take on many forms.

17             And so it could be just as simple as, someone

18      that comes to the door of an elderly individual --

19      it doesn't have to be elderly, but it happens a

20      lot -- and -- or they don't speak English, or they

21      just don't understand the law very well.

22             And what they'll be told is:  Oh, I see

23      you're behind on your mortgage.  Let me help you get

24      a modification on your mortgage.

25             And amidst those documents that they'll be







                                                             161
 1      signing, there's a deed, and it transfers it over to

 2      a new individual.  And they have no idea that it

 3      happened.

 4             It's as simple as that.

 5             SENATOR MURRAY:  That's the one.  But then

 6      there's also --

 7             MARK ANDERSON:  But there's other issues,

 8      yeah.

 9             CHARLES JOHNSON:  There's another way, too,

10      though.

11             There's the situation where someone can pass

12      away, an older person could pass away.  And what

13      they will do is, there's companies that will find

14      like this long-lost relative that will come into

15      play.

16             Another thing that we're noticing, too, is

17      that, because there's a lack of information and

18      education about it, you will have elderly people, or

19      even migrants, or -- yeah, migrants in The Bronx

20      area, who are not reporting -- because I remember

21      you had mentioned that earlier -- they're not

22      reporting because there's a language barrier.  These

23      people are coming to them, speaking fast.  You know,

24      telling them, Hey, we can help you with this.

25             Other pieces, that they could actually have







                                                             162
 1      paid off their mortgage.  But then there's this a --

 2      there's a notification saying that they owe

 3      $800,000, or something to that extent.

 4             And because they're elderly, they're not as

 5      quick on their feet as, you know, most people would

 6      be; so they just kind of sit on it, and not being

 7      educated in the law.

 8             So then, that's that way.

 9             But, again, there's a multitude of different

10      ways.  But, it's -- yeah, it's unfortunate, but,

11      yeah.

12             SENATOR MURRAY:  But I've heard of, like,

13      even online theft, where they don't even talk to

14      you.  You just -- you get a notice that, by the way,

15      you're being foreclosed on because you haven't paid

16      your mortgage on this -- this house.

17             How does that happen?

18             MARK ANDERSON:  I mean, if -- if people are

19      going to -- it's -- it's really -- I mean, if

20      there's a drain, there's going to be water that goes

21      through it.

22             So, I mean, in this situation, I mean, it's

23      as simple as, if somebody is going to commit a

24      crime, there's nothing preventing them from

25      submitting a fraudulent deed to the clerk's office.







                                                             163
 1      It's very hard to detect because the, you know,

 2      signatures look authentic.  Perhaps they forged the

 3      notary that was on it.

 4             Any number of things could happen.

 5             But, I mean, if -- if something does get

 6      recorded, then the clerk's office and a title

 7      company are going to look at it and say, Well, how

 8      are we to know that it's not authentic?

 9             The goal I think is --

10                [Simultaneous speaking.]

11             MARK ANDERSON:  I'm sorry.

12             CHARLES JOHNSON:  No, no, no.

13             MARK ANDERSON:  The goal is to, when it is

14      spotted, that there should be severe consequences

15      for it --

16             CHARLES JOHNSON:  Right.

17             MARK ANDERSON:  -- to deter people from doing

18      these things.

19             But it's, also, from the judiciary and from

20      law enforcement, which I've talked to many times,

21      from the DA's office, the police office, and the

22      courts themselves, is it's really a lack of

23      knowledge about how this actually works and how

24      title is actually transferred, because it's not

25      actually that complicated.







                                                             164
 1             But it can -- but when you're looking at it,

 2      it does.  I mean, a deed is sometimes 8 to 15 pages.

 3      What am I looking at.

 4             SENATOR MURRAY:  Right.

 5             CHARLES JOHNSON:  Just to add on to that:

 6      I think the other thing, that goes back to just

 7      financial literacy in the community.

 8             And I say that because what I notice is that

 9      they're targeting -- they're targeting people who

10      are asset rich but cash poor, or they just have

11      100 percent equity.

12             And a lot of communities of color don't

13      recognize and understand how to utilize equity so

14      they can have a home in Brooklyn where there's

15      $3 million in equity.  And they don't realize that

16      they could be utilizing that.  And they're just --

17      literally, there's people that are just salivating

18      at the mouth to try to approach that.

19             I think another issue is this, too --

20             And I think back to my mom, because my mom

21      just learned how to text not too -- a few years

22      back.

23             MARK ANDERSON:  [Indiscernible.]

24             CHARLES JOHNSON:  Yeah, you know, it's the

25      first time.







                                                             165
 1             -- but with AI, with all these other things

 2      or whatnot, with scamming when it comes to the

 3      e-mails and [indiscernible], like, they'll publish

 4      and making it seem like it's from a government --

 5      governmental agency.  But when you actually click on

 6      the address, it's some Gmail account.  A lot of

 7      elderly people, they're not, you know, tech-savvy.

 8             And, again, they're taking advantage of that.

 9             But I think it goes back to what he was

10      mentioning before about just the education piece,

11      because I don't think our communities actually

12      understand that, okay, well, once you own a home,

13      then you're now susceptible for someone to try to

14      steal from you.

15             They just think, that, hey, I own this home,

16      I paid this off, and that's just what it is.

17             But, again, criminals are going to do what

18      they're going to do.  And I think now, with

19      technology advancements, they have, you know,

20      utilized some of those things.

21             SENATOR MURRAY:  And the reason I ask, it is

22      complicated.

23             CHARLES JOHNSON:  Yes.

24             SENATOR MURRAY:  And so when we talk about

25      education, it's, where's the right spot for that







                                                             166
 1      education?

 2             To your point, is it:

 3             You're about to pay off the loan on your

 4      mortgage, you're just about to own it outright.

 5             Is that the point where we say, "You need

 6      this information," and we send it?  Or is it when

 7      you're buying the home?

 8             Like, when's the sweet spot?

 9             CHARLES JOHNSON:  I honestly think it's both.

10             I think that you have to start off.

11             And I was just talking to some friends who

12      now own homes, but they didn't realize that there

13      were different tax breaks, things of that nature,

14      until 10 years in.

15             And I think, also, when you're talking about

16      just elderly, you need to -- we have to have

17      community outreach, whether it's governmental or

18      whether we have particular coalitions going out,

19      including NAACP, where we're having these

20      conversations with them, having public hearings in

21      the local communities with them.

22             Hearing stories like the reverend here, you

23      know, so they can actually see this.

24             But I think you have to approach it from two

25      angles, because, yes, you have the older generation







                                                             167
 1      that's being impacted, but then you also have a

 2      group of younger folks that don't necessarily

 3      understand what -- this could happen to them later

 4      on down the road.

 5             SENATOR MURRAY:  Right.

 6             MARK ANDERSON:  Now, with that said, you

 7      know, if we get out of the forest and we go into the

 8      trees, there are some things that I do think that

 9      the State could implement that would create a little

10      more transparency in a lot of this process.

11             And so, as an example, and one of your

12      questions was:  Well, how does the scheme actually

13      work, let's say, in our class action?

14             It's something that no one would ever detect

15      unless they know exactly what they're looking at.

16      And even if they do know what they're looking at,

17      very few do.

18             And so the problem is, is that there is a

19      situation where there's surplus monies that are

20      being taken at a closing, that no one attends, and

21      it's a bank representative, a referee from the

22      court, and checks just get transferred, and later on

23      we find out what happened.

24             And on that document that summarizes what

25      exactly happened, it looks good.  It looks like they







                                                             168
 1      did the right calculations.

 2             But when you do the actual math, you find out

 3      that every single time, out of 14 to 15 firms that

 4      we looked at, they're all doing them wrong.

 5             And so in one of the situations, we found out

 6      that -- through the reporting of Gothamist and

 7      New York Focus, we found out that one -- that the

 8      servicers are actually dictating to their attorneys

 9      how they should be doing the calculations; not the

10      reverse.

11             Their attorneys should actually be guiding

12      them, and not the other way around.

13             And so one way that I think, and I've, you

14      know, been thinking about this since we first spoke,

15      Senator Myrie, is one way to actually systematize

16      the calculation method would be to actually just

17      create --

18             And I am not on the budget committee or

19      anything else, and I don't understand what it would

20      cost.

21             -- but I think it would be a very simple

22      calculation and a very simple computer program,

23      which is that the court requires them to just input

24      the information into a computer program that

25      actually dictates what actually they get from a







                                                             169
 1      residential foreclosure, because every calculation

 2      is the same for a residential foreclosure.

 3             Commercial, you get what you signed up for.

 4      I mean, everyone knows it's a little more

 5      complicated, people are considered to be a little

 6      more sophisticated.

 7             But if the judiciary actually just said, You

 8      know what?  Put it into the State calculator, and

 9      this is what comes up.  That's what you get.

10             And if they end up taking more then that,

11      then they've committed a crime, and then they lied

12      to the court.

13             And it's as simple as that.

14             Now, the law is very simple already, and it

15      has been for over a century, about what the law is

16      that I'm arguing in this class action.

17             It's, just, I've been litigating with banks

18      and servicers and their attorneys for my entire

19      career.  And they will make everything seem like

20      everything is just fine.  Everything's just fine.

21             And they'll find some judge in some county

22      outside that agrees with them.  They'll cite to it

23      in their papers.  And once it's adopted, it becomes

24      gospel.

25             CHARLES JOHNSON:  Yep.







                                                             170
 1             MARK ANDERSON:  And then it will go to the

 2      Second Department or the First Department, the

 3      Third Department, Fourth Department, maybe someone

 4      will agree with them there.

 5             And then, all of a sudden, we have a

 6      disconnect between the departments.

 7             And then, all of a sudden, we have judge- and

 8      lawyer-created law.

 9             And that's exactly what I'm dealing with

10      right here.

11             And I'm sure you deal with it yourself.

12             CHARLES JOHNSON:  Yeah, yeah.

13             SENATOR MURRAY:  Okay.

14             MARK ANDERSON:  So they will -- my class

15      action, if you look it up, you will -- they will

16      come up with all sorts of creative arguments.  But

17      the one thing they do not say is that I'm wrong.

18             SENATOR MURRAY:  Right, right.

19             If you have any suggestions, if you could

20      submit them.

21             MARK ANDERSON:  So the last page of my

22      remarks, I can read through it if you'd like right

23      now.

24             SENATOR MURRAY:  No.

25             MARK ANDERSON:  But I do have them on the







                                                             171
 1      back page, and I look forward to any comment.

 2             I've practiced in all these areas, and I do

 3      have some input that I would love to give you guys;

 4      but I obviously don't have the time for it today.

 5             But I do appreciate the interest, and I look

 6      forward to helping out as best as I can.

 7             SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you.

 8             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

 9             MARK ANDERSON:  Just one quick --

10             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, Senator Murray.

11             CHARLES JOHNSON:  Oh.

12             SENATOR MYRIE:  Go ahead.

13             MARK ANDERSON:  I would just say, because it

14      ties into the educational thing, but education is a

15      preventative tool.

16             But I do think that if we look at free record

17      alerts and brief administrative holds for clear red

18      flags, I believe that that also helps.  It stops,

19      you know, the early fraud -- early fraud detection

20      early, and then also avoids, you know, the expensive

21      litigation pieces.

22             But, again, it's about actually reaching --

23      meeting people where they are and letting them know

24      exactly what's going on.

25             So -- yeah.  That's all I want to say.







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 1             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

 2             Thank you very much.

 3             And thank you, Senator Murray.

 4             We've been joined by Senator Brisport who has

 5      a couple of questions.

 6             SENATOR BRISPORT:  Thank you, Senator Myrie.

 7             And thank you all for being here.

 8             To Mr. Johnson from the NAACP, thank you

 9      for your testimony on deed theft, an incredible

10      scourge in our communities.

11             And, you know, in my office we have

12      introduced a suite of legislation to build off of a

13      lot of the great work that's been done by

14      Senator Myrie and the AG.

15             I just -- I did notice in your written

16      testimony -- I'm sorry for missing your verbal

17      testimony -- one of your recommendations was to

18      increase funding for HOPP.

19             And I was just curious if the NAACP had put

20      forward a dollar amount that you thought would be

21      good?

22             CHARLES JOHNSON:  Not right at this moment.

23      But we can definitely get back to you with a dollar

24      amount.  That's not a problem.

25             SENATOR BRISPORT:  Okay.  The budget is due







                                                             173
 1      April 1st.  So --

 2             CHARLES JOHNSON:  No, no.  We can get it to

 3      you this week.

 4             SENATOR BRISPORT:  Thank you.

 5             That was it.  Thank you.

 6             SENATOR MYRIE:  Great.  Thank you.

 7             And I'll just say:  This is an issue that

 8      I care very deeply about.

 9             In anticipation of this hearing, I wrote a

10      similar letter of inquiry, that I had directed to

11      the student loan industry, to a number of law firms

12      that conduct foreclosure proceedings.

13             Most of them ignored and flat-out did not

14      respond.

15             And I did get a response from one particular

16      firm, who referred to me as Senator Mylie [ph.],

17      misspelled the name.  And also said --

18             OFF-CAMERA SPEAKER:  Can I guess?

19             SENATOR MYRIE:  -- and said, on the advice of

20      counsel, that they were going to refuse to answer

21      any questions.

22             Which I think speaks to the condition that we

23      find ourselves in, where regular New Yorkers who do

24      not have State Senate letterhead, who do not chair

25      the Codes Committee, who are not elected to office,







                                                             174
 1      have no shot at getting any accountability if we

 2      don't get even a bare response.

 3             So thank you for the work that all of you are

 4      doing, and continue to do.  And we look forward to

 5      continuing the engagement.

 6             Thank you.

 7             MARK ANDERSON:  Thank you, Senators.

 8             CHARLES JOHNSON:  Thank you.

 9             SENATOR MYRIE:  We will next hear from

10      Mr. Scott Buchanan.

11             Whenever you're ready.

12             SCOTT BUCHANAN:  All right.  Thank you very

13      much.

14             Chair Myrie and Chair May, and committee

15      members, thank you for the invitation to testify

16      today about areas of fraud concern, especially in

17      the student lending market.

18             I am Scott Buchanan, the executive director

19      of the Student Loan Servicing Alliance, which

20      represent more than 95 percent of all student loan

21      servicing in the country, including New York State.

22             We are the designated customer service

23      operations of private lenders, as well as the

24      federal government who itself originates more than

25      90 percent of all student loans to 40 million







                                                             175
 1      consumers.

 2             Given that role, we are on the front lines

 3      everyday, often dealing with our impact when fraud

 4      is committed.

 5             Today we see three main areas of actual fraud

 6      that are similar to what you've heard before today,

 7      that can and should be the focus of enforcement by

 8      the State.

 9             The first major area of concern today is

10      schemes to apply for and take out new student loans

11      or refinancing them by using false identities.

12             These scammers apply for and take a loan

13      online with a lender or school using stolen or

14      synthetic borrower information, like SSNs, and then

15      unenroll and leave the school, and then taking the

16      cash and leaving the school, the lender, and the

17      government on the hook.

18             And the borrower's identity who was stolen is

19      left to deal with undoing the harm on credit reports

20      and disputing the loan.

21             Lenders and schools use proprietary

22      strategies to try to identify the fraud before the

23      loan is made.  But the fraudsters, too, have become

24      more sophisticated today despite our best efforts.

25             The second area of fraud from the past is







                                                             176
 1      likely to reemerge with some vigor, as Congress

 2      recently made material changes to the federal

 3      student loan program.

 4             This other scheme is offering independent

 5      counseling for an up-front fee, or offering things

 6      like the ability to lower their payment below what

 7      their servicer will offer them, or access to or

 8      priority consideration for secret loan forgiveness.

 9             All of these are false claims.

10             They then pocket the fee, and often lie to

11      the servicer, to skim part of the payment the

12      borrower thinks that they are making.

13             Months later, the borrower will often

14      discover that the harm has been done in bad credit

15      reporting or increased loan balances.

16             These scammers prey on borrowers when

17      confusion or large change happens in the loan

18      programs, as will occur this year, and are abetted

19      by so-called "borrower advocates" who scare

20      borrowers from talking to their actual loan

21      servicer, the only who can offer any of these

22      loan-forgiveness programs or better repayment

23      options and does not charge borrowers to do so.

24             Great work has been done by the FTC, with the

25      support of my members, to reduce this issue







                                                             177
 1      nationally, but it continues to be a problem.

 2             The final area of fraud that should be

 3      carefully overseen is deceptive or misleading claims

 4      by institutions of education themselves.

 5             The vast majority do great work in educating

 6      consumers on the realities and risks and costs of

 7      getting a post-secondary education or certificate.

 8      But some in the past have made promises in marketing

 9      materials to induce students to attend, spend their

10      money, and borrow.

11             Often these have been claims of guaranteed

12      employment or specific salary increases that

13      graduates of their program or school will get,

14      knowing full well those claims are unfounded.

15             It is certainly much better today, but we

16      must be vigilant for New Yorker consumers, to try

17      and improve their economic prospects.

18             I know my time is limited, so I'll address

19      what changes can reduce this kind of fraud.

20             Better focused enforcement of existing laws.

21             Today, in New York, all of these activities

22      are illegal, especially under new authority this

23      legislature gave, effective last month, that,

24      essentially, expands UDAP authority.

25             Providing additional resources to the AG and







                                                             178
 1      other agencies to root out these clearly bad actors

 2      and enforce the laws on the books is the most

 3      effective step you can take today.

 4             And while I'm not sure needed, any further

 5      legislation really must ensure standards of

 6      materiality of consumer impact and intentionality to

 7      not drive out good actors; to wit: in my example of

 8      counseling services, there are many good nonprofit

 9      firms or others who are doing this work today and

10      charging maybe a small fee.  And they often can make

11      bona fide mistakes, trying to navigate the

12      labyrinthian system of repayment options created by

13      the federal government.

14             Not making allowance in law or regulation for

15      reasonable standards will likely only make the

16      situation worse, as good-scaled and regulated actors

17      feel for -- fear for fear -- flee for fear, if

18      I could speak, of unintentionally making any error

19      with little to know borrower harm.

20             This will create a vacuum in New York, filled

21      with those who really don't care about compliance

22      anyway and ignore licensing requirements.

23             And by the time you find who they are, they

24      will have vanished.

25             So I urge you really to be thoughtful about







                                                             179
 1      unintentional impacts.

 2             You know, I think we want to continue to work

 3      with you all on the sort of opportunities here,

 4      share stories that we're hearing on the front lines,

 5      and continue to work with you on legislation to

 6      improve the situation, and make sure we can continue

 7      to reduce fraud and harm that's happening in the

 8      state of New York.

 9             Thank you.

10             And I'm happy to take any questions.

11             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

12             Senator Brisport?

13             SENATOR BRISPORT:  Not yet.

14             SENATOR MYRIE:  Senator Murray?

15             SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you, Chairman.

16             To be honest, I didn't realize, you brought

17      up the first example, and that is, you know,

18      identity fraud and people stealing from false

19      student loans.  I didn't realize it was as big as it

20      is.

21             What percentage would you say that is of

22      this?

23             SCOTT BUCHANAN:  I would not characterize it

24      as a huge marketplace.  Right?

25             I think it is more disruptive, though,







                                                             180
 1      because it's harder to root out, because when you

 2      take out a student loan, for example, most of those

 3      loans go into a grace period for a certain period of

 4      time.

 5             So it can be many months before a consumer

 6      would know that a loan had even been taken out on

 7      their behalf, as opposed to other credit products

 8      that show up relatively instantly, right, sort of,

 9      if you pull your credit report or something like

10      that.

11             So I would not characterize it as a huge

12      marketplace, but it is growing, especially as

13      synthetic identity theft continues to expand, as you

14      heard about earlier today.

15             SENATOR MURRAY:  And what's the best

16      protection against that?

17             SCOTT BUCHANAN:  Yeah, well, I mean, I think,

18      from an average consumer perspective, there's not

19      much you can do up front -- right? -- because, if

20      someone steals your identity and has gotten it,

21      there's not -- I mean, obviously, there are ways to

22      make sure that you reduce the amount of personally

23      identifiable information that's available for you on

24      the Internet.

25             That's difficult to do these days.







                                                             181
 1             But when people get synthetic demographic

 2      information or real demographic information, it's

 3      hard to do.

 4             So I think being vigilant.  Monitoring your

 5      credit report, monitoring your credit score, that's

 6      the one thing you can do.

 7             Now, you may not be able to stop it, but you

 8      can catch it early.

 9             SENATOR MURRAY:  Okay.

10             Thank you.

11             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

12             And thank you for your testimony.

13             I think the portion of it directed at some of

14      the ancillary activity that happens outside of

15      legitimate servicers I think is really concerning,

16      and I think it's important for us to keep our eye on

17      the ball there.

18             I just want some clarity because, as

19      I mentioned in my opening, when I reached out to

20      some of the servicers, they -- many of them referred

21      me to MOHELA, and then MOHELA referred us to you.

22             And so I just want to clarify that you do

23      represent MOHELA?

24             SCOTT BUCHANAN:  Yeah -- yes.  MOHELA is what

25      [simultaneous speaking] --







                                                             182
 1             SENATOR MYRIE:  MOHELA.  I'm sorry.  Okay.

 2             SCOTT BUCHANAN:  Yes, they're a member of my

 3      trade association.

 4             SENATOR MYRIE:  And MOHELA suggested to me in

 5      the letter, having not answered any of the

 6      questions, that we should go through you.

 7             And so I guess my question to you is:  On

 8      issues of previous penalties on any of the actions

 9      that were brought to light by litigation or any of

10      the CFPB actions, whether MOHELA and other servicers

11      would be willing to answer this committee's

12      questions?

13             SCOTT BUCHANAN:  Well, I think one of the

14      challenges, especially for MOHELA, is that they are

15      a federal contractor.  Right?

16             So the bulk of the student loan servicing

17      work they do today is with the department of

18      education data.  And so they are under contractual

19      obligations not to share that with third parties.

20             So I think there's an opportunity, though,

21      to, you know, perhaps open a line of dialogue with

22      the department of education whose data it is, so we

23      can share more of what the oversight is that is

24      conducted pretty regularly by, as you highlight, not

25      only the department of education, the CFPB, state







                                                             183
 1      regulators, DEEP.  New York DFS oversees and

 2      regulates and licenses and examines servicers like

 3      MOHELA.

 4             SENATOR MYRIE:  Okay.  So we should go

 5      through the department of education and not the

 6      servicers?

 7             SCOTT BUCHANAN:  So I -- on the federal

 8      student loan program, we are contractually obligated

 9      to refer you to the department of education.  So...

10             SENATOR MYRIE:  Okay.  You know, I just

11      wanted to be clear, because we have, of course, the

12      responsibility to New Yorkers, and those are our

13      constituents, and those are the ones that are having

14      to shoulder the burden of the student loan payments.

15             And when there are issues, when someone comes

16      into my office, I often don't have the luxury of

17      saying, well, this is really not my thing, and you

18      can go speak to someone else.

19             And so we just have to get, I think, absolute

20      clarity on whether there's going to be any sort of

21      dialogue with the servicer themselves who are under

22      contract, as you mentioned, by way of taxpayer

23      dollar, to service these loans.

24             And if you are, as I understand it, to the

25      tune of billions of taxpayer dollars, have the







                                                             184
 1      contract to service the loans, and are not willing

 2      to answer those questions to that public, but,

 3      instead, refer us to the department of education,

 4      I think a lot of us would find that problematic.

 5             And when it's time to come collect that loan

 6      payment, there isn't a conversation about, well, you

 7      should go here or you should go there, you should go

 8      to another place.

 9             The demand is, pay the amount.

10             And I think that that should work in two

11      directions if we have questions about what those

12      service practices are.

13             But I do appreciate you coming to testify

14      today.

15             SCOTT BUCHANAN:  Yeah, and if I might just

16      say, that I look forward to working with you and

17      your staff as well.

18             We do annual reports to DFS today that has a

19      ton of data about, sort of, performance standards,

20      delinquency, what interaction looks like with

21      borrowers, as well as the examinations that the

22      State does to actually go in and verify that what

23      we're doing, and from a customer service level,

24      whether that's looking at call reportings, checking

25      sort of, you know, audit trails, all that sort of







                                                             185
 1      stuff.

 2             I know DFS has a lot of that data today.  So

 3      maybe there's an opportunity for us to work

 4      together, to get them to share some of that with

 5      you.

 6             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

 7             Senator Brisport.

 8             SENATOR BRISPORT:  [Inaudible.]

 9             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you very much for your

10      patience and your testimony today.

11             SCOTT BUCHANAN:  Thank you.

12             We are next going to hear from Winston and

13      Andy if they are here.

14             Whenever you're ready.

15             WINSTON BERKMAN-BREEN:  All right.  Can you

16      hear me.

17             SENATOR MYRIE:  (Nods head.)

18             WINSTON BERKMAN-BREEN:  All right, great.

19             Thank you, Chair Myrie, members of the

20      committee.

21             My name is Winston Berkman-Breen, and I'm the

22      legal director of Protect Borrowers, a nonprofit

23      policy organization focused on household credit and

24      debt.

25             Previously I was a financial regulator at







                                                             186
 1      DFS, where I was the student loan ombudsman and the

 2      director of consumer advocacy, and was legal

 3      services attorney before that in New York and

 4      Long Island.

 5             I've submitted more detailed written

 6      testimony, and so I will focus my time today on

 7      conveying a few important points.

 8             Specifically, I want to stress that, for our

 9      existing consumer protection laws to have any

10      meaningful effect, there has to be meaningful

11      enforcement which requires a strong private right of

12      action alongside government enforcement.

13             And I will say, a little off-script, most of

14      what I've heard today would be addressed by a strong

15      private right of action: crypto, deed theft,

16      fintech, student loan servicing, et cetera.

17             Back to script.

18             So, first, I want to acknowledge the abuses

19      that New Yorkers are facing today.

20             Just a few examples from our legal services

21      colleagues:

22             A company persuaded a 73-year-old social

23      security benefit recipient to charge $22,000 on her

24      credit card for a bogus entrepreneurial workshop;

25             A fraudulent debt-settlement company







                                                             187
 1      charged -- or, pressured a 79-year-old woman to stop

 2      paying her credit cards and to mail them her

 3      payments instead;

 4             A mortgage loan servicer charged an

 5      unauthorized convenience fee for homeowners to pay

 6      their mortgage online, rather than by mail;

 7             And, again, as we've heard, deed theft

 8      remains a huge issue in the state.

 9             With sky-high prices and stagnant wages,

10      households across the state, literally, cannot

11      afford to be price-gouged or taken advantage of like

12      this.  And with the right consumer protection law,

13      they wouldn't have to be.

14             Unfortunately, New York's General Consumer

15      Protection Law, GBL 349, is out of sync with the

16      majority of the country.

17             The bedrock of consumer protection in this

18      country is the prohibition against unfair,

19      deceptive, or abusive acts and practices, called

20      "UDAPs."

21             My written testimony provides more

22      information about UDAP and its well-established

23      history in the country, as New York's UDAP, GBL 349,

24      is one of the weakest in the country because it does

25      not completely prohibit unfair, deceptive, or







                                                             188
 1      abusive conduct.  Until last year, it didn't

 2      prohibit unfair or abusive conduct at all.

 3             You may recall the FAIR Act which was enacted

 4      last year and took effect a few weeks ago, and

 5      increased the attorney general's authority to

 6      prosecute unfair or abusive practices.  It did not,

 7      however, extend those authorities to the existing

 8      private right of action which still only applies to

 9      deception.

10             For this reason, New York's law is weaker

11      than 42 other jurisdictions which allows for --

12      these other jurisdictions allow for private

13      enforcement of all of their rights.

14             As a New Yorker, I feel lucky to have a

15      strong prosecutor in Attorney General James, who we

16      heard from earlier.  But her office cannot address

17      every wrong that every New Yorker experiences

18      everywhere in the state, nor should that be the

19      objective of government enforcement.

20             The Attorney General may be the people's

21      lawyer, but she cannot be every person's lawyer.

22             The UDAP standard is not new.  But without

23      private enforcement, there cannot be meaningful

24      accountability.

25             For this reason, industry opposition to a







                                                             189
 1      private right of action should be met with great

 2      skepticism.

 3             Another point I'd like to make is that

 4      improving New York's law is necessary in light of

 5      what we're seeing at the federal level and their

 6      complete abdication of consumer protection.

 7             The FTC and CFPB are the primary agencies

 8      responsible for enforcing federal UDAPs, but neither

 9      of them are doing that today.

10             For example:  The Trump Administration is

11      gutting the CFPB.  They fired nearly all the staff,

12      terminated most of their enforcement actions, and

13      stopped complying with at least 87 statutory

14      responsibilities.

15             My organization estimates that this has cost

16      households over $18 billion already.

17             This federal abdication is also affecting

18      New Yorkers.

19             Based on analysis of CFPB complaint data that

20      we've done, complaints filed by New Yorkers nearly

21      doubled from 2024 to '25, from 180,000 complaints to

22      over 300,000.

23             The largest percent increases were in the

24      Fingers Lakes, Mohawk Valley, Capital Region, and

25      Western New York, with the largest absolute increase







                                                             190
 1      in New York City.

 2             At the same time that the number of

 3      complaints coming from New Yorkers has increased by

 4      nearly 70 percent, the number of complaints closed

 5      with consumer relief has decreased by 10 percentage

 6      points, from 51 percent to 41 percent of closed

 7      complaints.

 8             Put differently, while the number of

 9      complaints is increasing, the relief is decreasing.

10             It's clear that New Yorkers cannot count on

11      the federal government to help them.

12             I'll conclude by noting that enacting a

13      stronger UDAP now is also a sound investment in

14      New York's future.

15             If the recent years have showed us anything,

16      it's that we cannot say with any certainty what the

17      next few years will bring.

18             A strong UDAP has the flexibility to address

19      whatever issue may arise; whether that's price

20      gouging during a future crisis or surveillance by

21      tech and AI firms.

22             There's no need to run back to the

23      legislature every time a new harm emerges.

24             Let me make clear:  That unfair, deceptive,

25      or abusive contact is never permitted in the state.







                                                             191
 1             Thank you.

 2             ANDY MORRISON:  Okay.  Thank you.

 3             Good afternoon, and thank you Senators Myrie,

 4      May, Murray, and Brisport.

 5             I'm Andy Morrison.  I'm the associate

 6      director of New Economy Project, a New York

 7      City-based economic justice organization.

 8             We are working with community groups across

 9      the city and state to build an economy that works

10      for all, based on cooperation, racial justice,

11      neighborhood equity, and ecological sustainability.

12             My testimony today focuses on financial

13      technology, or "fintech," schemes that are

14      structured to evade New York's longstanding usury

15      and consumer protection laws.

16             As the committee members know, payday lending

17      is categorically illegal in New York State.

18             Our civil usury law caps interest at

19      16 percent, and it's a felony to charge more than

20      25 percent interest on a loan; yet fintech companies

21      operating under the label of "earned-wage access"

22      have -- are conducting business right here in our

23      state.

24             They're making loans with average interest

25      rates -- average interest rates -- that exceed







                                                             192
 1      330 percent APR.

 2             We estimate that this industry has extracted

 3      more than half a billion dollars from working

 4      New Yorkers' paychecks since 2019.

 5             That is, effectively, forcing workers to pay

 6      to get paid.

 7             So how does an industry that charges

 8      effective interest rates so far above the usury cap

 9      that we set as a matter of public policy in this

10      state operate here?

11             The answer is, that fintech companies falsely

12      claim that their loans -- excuse me -- that their

13      products are not loans in order to circumvent our

14      robust and longstanding consumer protection laws.

15             How do they do this?

16             Well, they aggressively market their products

17      on social media, in workplace break rooms, even on

18      the New York City subway, only -- and that they lure

19      New Yorkers in who are struggling to make ends meet,

20      only to impose high and hidden fees that trap them

21      in cycles of repeat borrowing.  These are expedited

22      transfer fees, subscription charges, and even tips.

23             They feed user data into proprietary AI

24      underwriting systems so that they can monitor

25      workers' accounts, so that they can ensure that they







                                                             193
 1      get paid as soon as that worker gets paid.

 2             And that -- those predictions are often

 3      inaccurate, and that leads to cascading financial

 4      harm, like overdraft fees.

 5             At every step, EWA companies design their

 6      products to evade enforcement of laws that prohibit

 7      high-cost lending.

 8             The industry seeks to nullify state usury

 9      protections by claiming its products are not loans,

10      an argument that relies on strained interpretations

11      of legal concepts, such as recourse.

12             This is regulatory arbitrage, designing a

13      business model to exploit loopholes and sidestep

14      laws meant to bar high-cost lending.

15             It's targeting working people and communities

16      of color.

17             The government accountability office found

18      that these apps are mostly used by people earning

19      less than $50,000 a year.

20             The Community Service Society of New York did

21      a survey, and found that New Yorkers under 30 are

22      using these payday loan apps frequently, or all the

23      time in many cases.

24             Black and Latino workers were significantly

25      more likely to report frequent use than White







                                                             194
 1      respondents, underscoring the industry's

 2      disproportionate impact on communities of color.

 3             So New York bans payday lending for a reason.

 4             Our usury laws reflect longstanding public

 5      policy to protect New Yorkers from exploitative

 6      high-cost loans that strip wealth from communities

 7      and trap people in cycles of debt.

 8             Fortunately, the attorney general has taken

 9      enforcement action against two leading EWA

10      companies, finding:  Gross and systematic

11      misconduct.  APR's as high as 750 percent.  People

12      borrowing multiple times a week from these apps.

13             One worker took out hundreds of advances over

14      a two-year period, paying nearly $1400 in fees.

15             This is part of the business model.

16             And so what we are asking for this --

17      demanding, really, this session is that the Governor

18      and the legislature step up and protect working

19      people from widespread financial predation and

20      wealth extraction.

21             We can't rely on enforcement alone.

22             It's important what the attorney general is

23      doing, but the legislature needs to step up.  And it

24      can do that by passing the Stop Taking Our Pay Act

25      sponsored by Senator Brouk.  That's 8939.  And that







                                                             195
 1      would clarify existing law that EWA advances are

 2      loans, and that New York's usury laws and the

 3      interest rate caps apply to this industry.

 4             So thank you very much for inviting us to

 5      testify today.

 6             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, both.

 7             Senator May.

 8             SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.

 9             Thank you for your testimony.

10             I wanted to ask -- sorry --

11      Mr. Berkman-Breen, a question.

12             I really appreciate the data in your written

13      testimony that shows how the -- effectively, the

14      closure of the CFPB is affecting New York.

15             And I'm wondering if you have an analysis of

16      why, basically, my district, or the Finger Lakes,

17      Mohawk Valley, Central New York, would be

18      dramatically higher than other areas of state?

19             Like, what would be driving these regional

20      differences, in your opinion?

21             WINSTON BERKMAN-BREEN:  Thank you, Senator,

22      for that question.

23             I should follow up and say, too, that happy

24      to follow up with the committee or any member on

25      district-specific.  I just need your ZIP Codes, and







                                                             196
 1      then we can go from there.

 2             You know, it's hard to say, because there's a

 3      lot of factors that go into our lives.  You know, we

 4      sometimes bucket these things into different terms

 5      or committees.

 6             But, ultimately, we're all living as sort of

 7      holistic people who have different experiences.

 8             And it could be anything from fewer cops on

 9      the beat.  Right?  The federal government isn't

10      doing its job.  And maybe your region doesn't have

11      as strong of a local consumer protection.

12             I'm a New York City resident.  The department

13      of consumer and worker protections is phenomenal.

14      We are so lucky to have them.

15             We also have a very holistic 311 system in

16      New York City.

17             So that, you know, local resources filling

18      the gap can be one a reason.

19             There could also be larger macroeconomic

20      considerations.  Maybe your region has had more

21      layoffs.  People are just having, you know, tighter

22      budgets in their household than other parts of the

23      state.

24             So it really varies, and it's going to vary

25      probably between regions, why they're experiencing







                                                             197
 1      it.  I don't think there's any one.

 2             But I do think, having just said that, there

 3      are blanket things the State can do.

 4             I completely endorse my colleague Andy's

 5      testimony about these products that -- like EWA,

 6      like buy now, pay later, which the State has already

 7      regulated -- and thank you for that -- that go in

 8      and take advantage of them.  I mean, I did this, so

 9      can industry.  Right?

10             And so they can go in and say, Hey, this part

11      of the state, this part of city, people are hurting.

12      Let's go offer them free money and then charge them

13      for it.

14             So there's -- it's hard to diagnose the

15      cause, but I think we can still arrive at some

16      solutions.

17             SENATOR MAY:  Okay, thank you.

18             And I just have to ask about this line on

19      page 6, where it says that the exam -- "CFPB is

20      making its examiners make a humility pledge" --

21             WINSTON BERKMAN-BREEN:  Yes.

22             SENATOR MAY:  -- "to each company before

23      commencing an exam."

24             Can you just tell me what that is?

25             WINSTON BERKMAN-BREEN:  Yes.  So that is the







                                                             198
 1      current Trump Administration, CFPB, led by

 2      Russ Vought, again, which is trying to kill itself

 3      off, like very explicitly.  I'm not hyperbolizing.

 4             The exams -- just so we're on the same page,

 5      and DFS does exams as well; as does DCWP, the local

 6      and New York City equivalent:  An exam is just an

 7      audit for compliance with financial laws.  Whether

 8      that's a sort of safety and soundness prudential,

 9      anti-money laundering, or whether that's a sort of

10      consumer protection market conduct, "how are you

11      treating people?" compliance.

12             But it's just compliance with state, federal,

13      and local laws, depending on the jurisdiction.

14             So an examiner will go on-site, look at books

15      and records.  We heard from Scott Buchanan, maybe

16      audit some calls, et cetera.

17             And, normally, they do that, and maybe that

18      would be force of being a government regulator.  You

19      know, they -- I don't want to be crude, but they say

20      "jump."  Regulated and [indiscernible] are supposed

21      say, "how high?"

22             And there's is a good-faith relationship

23      there.  But there can -- there has to be candor; you

24      have to open your books and records.

25             We've seen a very robust -- under the







                                                             199
 1      Rohit Chopra CFPBM [sic], the President Biden's

 2      Administration, a very robust, not inappropriately

 3      so, but a robust consumer protection agency out of

 4      the CFPB.

 5             The response to that, in addition to rolling

 6      back, is that now examiners, when they go on-site,

 7      have to, literally, read a one-page humility pledge

 8      out loud to the industry that they're about to

 9      examine, which talks --

10             I could have appended it, and I should have.

11      But I'll follow up with you, and send it as a link.

12             -- which, as the title suggests, basically

13      says, you know, I am not here to overstep.  And, you

14      know, I'm not going to be aggressive like our

15      predecessors.

16             And it is very much in the, you know, ilk of

17      what we're seeing under this administration, really

18      demonizing previous appropriate law enforcement; but

19      also just, literally, putting industry up on a

20      pedestal when it should be the reverse relationship.

21             SENATOR MAY:  Okay.  Unbelievable.

22             WINSTON BERKMAN-BREEN:  Yeah, you can't

23      really make this stuff up.

24             SENATOR MAY:  Yeah, right.

25             And, Mr. Morrison, just following up to --







                                                             200
 1      looking at the data in the other testimony, I'm

 2      wondering about the payday loans and some of the

 3      oversteps that you talked about.

 4             Do you have regional data on that?

 5             Is that something that -- where we can find

 6      out how this is affecting my district or my region

 7      of the state?

 8             ANDY MORRISON:  Definitely.  It's linked in

 9      an end note of our testimony.

10             We put out a report last year called

11      "$500 million and counting."  I think it's the

12      second end note.

13             And if you take a look at that report, we

14      broke out the wealth extraction that these companies

15      are engaging in by region.  I can't remember the

16      regions off the top of my head, but we looked across

17      the state, and found -- yeah, that -- you know, all

18      over state we have a deepening affordability crisis.

19             So where people are living paycheck to

20      paycheck, they're looking for solutions.  And these

21      companies are preying on that sort of vulnerability.

22             And so we're seeing it across the state, and

23      it is draining money right out of people's

24      paychecks.

25             SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.







                                                             201
 1             Yeah, I mean, I chair the Commission on Rural

 2      Resources, and I represent a district that has the

 3      city of Syracuse.  But it has a lot of rural

 4      communities in it as well.

 5             And what we know about smaller municipalities

 6      is they don't have the resources to fight back

 7      against a lot of these things, and so the people

 8      feel helpless, too.

 9             So the more that we have kind of centralized

10      information, and potentially centralized solutions,

11      the better for their -- our consumers.

12             ANDY MORRISON:  Oh, sure.

13             I mean, to your point, regular working

14      New Yorkers are outmatched by an industry that's

15      backed by Silicon Valley venture capitalists.

16             It's -- the industry is increasingly getting

17      investment from Wall Street, banks, and investment

18      houses.  And they're spending huge amounts of sums

19      on lobbying and campaign contributions, to normalize

20      and entrench this business model.

21             And that is very concerning to us because,

22      unless this legislature and Governor act, this can

23      become just a normal part of every day life for

24      working people.

25             And we can't accept that in New York, where







                                                             202
 1      people have to pay to just get the paychecks that

 2      they've earned through their labor.

 3             SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.

 4             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

 5             Senator Brisport?

 6             SENATOR BRISPORT:  Thank you, Mr. Chair.

 7             Thank you both for being here today, your

 8      testimony.

 9             Mr. Berkman-Breen, great to see you made it

10      up here safely from Brooklyn.

11             I just --

12             WINSTON BERKMAN-BREEN:  Senator, thank you.

13             SENATOR BRISPORT:  Of course.

14             -- I had a few questions.

15             Looking at some of your recommendations for

16      policy, I was just -- just a general-question

17      curious:  If you have identified existing

18      legislation you wanted to uplift, or if you figured

19      these policies would best be served by a new

20      legislation?

21             WINSTON BERKMAN-BREEN:  Thank you for the

22      question, Senator.

23             I think there will be new legislation

24      introduced, and that's in large part because

25      existing legislation, such as the Community and







                                                             203
 1      Small Business Protection Act (CSBPA), is somewhat

 2      mooted because the FAIR Act did pass.  And so

 3      there's contradictory parts of what that bill would

 4      have done, that's already been accomplished, and

 5      what still needs to be done.

 6             So I do think that, as a single vehicle or a

 7      sub-bill, there needs to be new legislation, even if

 8      it's just taking piecemeal parts of existing

 9      legislation and reentering them.

10             SENATOR BRISPORT:  Amazing.  Thank you.

11             And then I know you said New York is well

12      behind a lot of the country on these issues.

13             Do you know if there's a state-by-state

14      breakdown anywhere of what practices are being used

15      in other states or not?

16             WINSTON BERKMAN-BREEN:  There is.

17             So one of the footnotes is to the National

18      Consumer Law Center's "50 State Guide."

19             But, also, I'll be able to follow up with the

20      committee with my colleagues from -- Immobilization

21      for Justice created a very simple 50-state color

22      graph.  And you see the 8 states in red, of which

23      we're one, and you see the 42 other states in green

24      where there are stronger laws.

25             SENATOR BRISPORT:  Thank you so much.







                                                             204
 1             WINSTON BERKMAN-BREEN:  Sure.

 2             SENATOR MYRIE:  Senator Murray.

 3             SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you, Chairman.

 4             Thank you both for being here.

 5             And, Mr. Berkman-Breen, you had mentioned --

 6      well, let's say this:  We can put the laws in place,

 7      we can even get the enforcement in place.  But if

 8      there is no bite to it, if there is no punishment to

 9      it.

10             I know there are some that believe that

11      punishment is not a deterrent.

12             I disagree, I think it is.  I think most

13      agree that it is.

14             I'm reading your testimony.

15             It says, "Finally, New York's law has

16      severely outdated damages provisions.  The current

17      statutory damages are $50, which is meaningless

18      deterrent for bad actors."

19             You even went on to say, "New York's UDAP law

20      is" -- "basically, it's toothless even with some of

21      the improvements that were made."

22             So how do we step it up?

23             I mean, you know, is punishment, is the

24      actual punishment, is that lacking?  And if so, how

25      much; I mean, how much should it be?







                                                             205
 1             You mentioned the $50, what should it be?

 2             WINSTON BERKMAN-BREEN:  Right.

 3             So in recent legislation, we proposed $2,000.

 4      I think, candidly, anywhere in the one to

 5      two thousand dollars, and this, again, where there

 6      is a finding of the legality.  Right?  This is not

 7      the threat of.  This is a judge that's made a

 8      determination that someone broke the law.  And per

 9      violation, there should be a meaningful penalty.

10             You can step it up for protected classes as

11      we have often done.  If it's a senior citizen, if

12      it's a combat veteran or their family or a service

13      member, et cetera.

14             There's plenty of, you know, trebling you can

15      do there.

16             But I think it's meaningful penalties --

17      right? -- in addition to actual damages.  Make the

18      person whole, and then add a deterrent factor on top

19      of it.

20             But then, also, and I don't want to overlook

21      my main point, which is, this needs to be privately

22      doable.  Right?

23             We have the private deception component now.

24      But we know that's been failing us because it's been

25      failing us for the last 50 years.







                                                             206
 1             The whole point of the FAIR Act was to get

 2      everyone on board with the tools we need.  And it

 3      is, again, a necessary but insufficient fix that

 4      we've given to the Attorney General because her

 5      office, we even heard from, and there's testimony,

 6      is doing such great work.  We're so lucky to live in

 7      this state with her at the helm, the department of

 8      law.

 9             But we need, as the legislature recognized in

10      1980s when it added a private right of action to a

11      law that did not have one, [indiscernible], did not

12      start with a private right of action, and you all

13      added it in, your predecessors, that you need to

14      have that private partnership across the state.

15             In parts of the state where there are --

16      I mean, I work with attorneys in the Syracuse area.

17      They are there.  This is not a sort of, you know, if

18      you build it, they won't come.  If you build it,

19      this will get used, but the economics have to make

20      sense for it.

21             SENATOR MURRAY:  Okay.  Thank you.

22             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you, Senator Murray.

23             And thank you again, to Winston and Andy, for

24      your testimony.  Thank you for your patience, for

25      waiting, and we look forward to continuing to







                                                             207
 1      engage.

 2             Thank you.

 3             WINSTON BERKMAN-BREEN:  Thank you.

 4             ANDY MORRISON:  Thank you all.

 5             SENATOR MYRIE:  And our last panel for the

 6      day, and we thank them for their patience, Emma and

 7      Christopher, who are making their way down.

 8             EMMA KREYCHE:  Shall I jump right in?

 9             SENATOR MYRIE:  (Nods head.)

10             EMMA KREYCHE:  First of all, thank you for

11      having me today.

12             My name is Emma Kreyche.  I'm the director of

13      advocacy, outreach, and education at the Worker

14      Justice Center of New York.  We are a legal services

15      and advocacy organization serving low-wage workers

16      across New York State, with a primary focus on

17      immigrant workers.

18             So the people we serve include farm workers,

19      day laborers, hospitality industry workers, domestic

20      workers, and many others who labor in industry where

21      wage theft and other forms of labor abuse are,

22      unfortunately, quite widespread.

23             The crime of wage theft takes many forms.

24      And exploitative employers can get remarkably

25      creative with their schemes to defraud employers







                                                             208
 1      of -- employees of their pay.

 2             So we've seen it all:  Paying workers off the

 3      books to avoid paying the proper overtime rate.

 4      Unlawful deductions.  Misclassification of workers.

 5      Requiring people to perform preparations before they

 6      clock in.  It kind of runs the gamut; the list goes

 7      on and on.

 8             It's really hard to overestimate or

 9      overstate -- I'm sorry.

10             It's hard to overstate the scale of wage

11      theft that occurs routinely in our communities or

12      its devastating impact on working people.

13             Estimates of stolen wages and benefits range

14      from 1 billion to upwards of 3 billion dollars

15      annually in New York State, with the DOL only able

16      to recover a very tiny fraction of that sum, as

17      little as 1 percent as we heard earlier today.

18             We're talking about billions of dollars each

19      year that workers can't use to pay their rent or

20      feed their families at a time when the rising cost

21      of living has already far outpaced wage increases.

22             One of the reasons it's difficult to get

23      precise data on wage theft is because so many cases

24      go unreported due to victims' well-founded fear of

25      retaliation.  And this is particularly true of many







                                                             209
 1      immigrant workers who fear that any sort of

 2      complaint against their employer could prompt a call

 3      to ICE.

 4             We've even been contacted about suspected

 5      schemes involving employers purposely contracting

 6      immigrant workers, and then reporting them to

 7      immigration authorities to avoid payment of wages.

 8             In most cases, however, I will say the

 9      implied threat of possible immigration consequences

10      is sufficient to prevent workers from coming

11      forward.  We receive so many calls that never result

12      in official complaints because workers conclude that

13      the risk is simply too great when weighed against

14      the likelihood of recovering their stolen wages.

15             And unscrupulous employers are making the

16      same calculation:  Building wage theft into their

17      business model as a routine practice, thereby

18      gaining a competitive advantage over law-abiding

19      employers.

20             And wage theft, of course, is not a new

21      problem.  And as lawmakers, some of you have of

22      course sought to address this crisis through the

23      legislative process.  You know, we have the Wage

24      Theft Prevention Act in 2011; amendments to the

25      penal code to allow criminal prosecution for both







                                                             210
 1      wage theft and immigration-related threats; and

 2      then, more recently, the DOL's expanded authority to

 3      collect on judgments.

 4             So these are all steps in the right

 5      direction.  But good lawmaking does not

 6      automatically translate into effective enforcement.

 7             Criminal prosecution of wage theft is

 8      relatively rare, especially outside of New York City

 9      where we work.

10             Meanwhile, DOL's capacity for civil

11      enforcement is woefully insufficient due to chronic

12      underfunding and well-documented staffing

13      challenges, with a federal government that has

14      drastically scaled back worker protections, and

15      continues to escalate attacks on immigrant

16      communities.

17             New York absolutely must do better.

18             The Empire Worker Protection Act is a

19      necessary part of the solution to New York's ongoing

20      wage theft crisis.  Modeled after a successful

21      California law that's been on the books for over

22      two decades, the Empire Act would expand public

23      enforcement of the labor law by creating a mechanism

24      that allows workers, whistleblowers, and labor

25      unions to bring claims on behalf of the State only







                                                             211
 1      if and when the department of labor and the office

 2      of attorney general declined to investigate the

 3      matter.

 4             Empire actions would allow for recovery of

 5      civil penalties, generating a projected $211 million

 6      annually for the State to reinvest in public

 7      enforcement, compared with the $2.2 million that was

 8      stated earlier as the total penalties collected last

 9      year.  This would enable the DOL to hire more staff,

10      raise salaries for investigators, and more

11      effectively combat wage theft.

12             All of this has borne out in California under

13      the PAGA law.

14             The whistleblower component of Empire is

15      particularly important for protecting vulnerable

16      immigrant workers, as it would allow actions to be

17      brought without naming the workers affected by the

18      violations in the complaint.

19             And just before concluding, I would like to

20      acknowledge that Governor Hochul has included

21      funding in her budget for district attorneys in

22      rural communities to take on new criminal wage theft

23      investigations.

24             And while this initiative may be well

25      intended, we know from experience that most







                                                             212
 1      vulnerable workers in New York's rural communities

 2      simply do not feel safe coming forward to law

 3      enforcement officials in their regions.

 4             Without clear prohibitions on the collusion

 5      of local enforcement agencies with federal

 6      immigration authorities, immigrant workers are

 7      unlikely to come forward to report the crime of wage

 8      theft.

 9             And this is just one of the many reasons why

10      criminal prosecution of wage theft is just not a

11      practical way to fill that gap in enforcement.

12             And while there's a place for law enforcement

13      in combating wage theft, strengthening civil

14      enforcement, and properly resourcing the DOL by

15      passing the Empire Act will have a far greater

16      impact.

17             Thank you.

18             CHRISTOPHER MARLBOROUGH:  I want to thank the

19      Senators for inviting me.

20             My name is Chris Marlborough.  I am a board

21      member of NELA New York, the National Employment

22      Lawyers Association's New York affiliate.

23             I am a practicing attorney, with -- where

24      I represent low-wage workers against white-collar

25      wage thieves.  And I want to tell you a little bit







                                                             213
 1      more about the scope of the problems and things that

 2      might not be -- every legislator may not be aware of

 3      as to what workers are dealing with; not only how

 4      they're getting ripped off of 3 billion -- up to

 5      $3 billion a year in the state of New York alone,

 6      but also how the deck is stacked against these

 7      workers from the day they start working, in many,

 8      many circumstances.

 9             To start with, I will tell you that there is

10      several categories of wage theft, but one of the

11      biggest ones is independent contractor fraud, where

12      people are totally misclassified as an independent

13      contractor.  Nothing independent about what they do

14      whatsoever.

15             You could be sitting in an office all day;

16      you could be a cheerleader -- right? -- who is lined

17      are up to move your fingers in unison with everybody

18      else, nothing independent about you, and they'll say

19      you're an independent contractor, and they'll say

20      you're not entitled to protections in the labor law,

21      and they'll say you're not entitled to contributions

22      to unemployment insurance, contributions to workers'

23      compensation, social security contributions from the

24      employer.

25             There are companies that will sell a package







                                                             214
 1      of how to make you cut your labor costs by

 2      30 percent by reclassifying your actual employees as

 3      independent contractors.  And those middlemen will

 4      often stay involved during the course of

 5      litigation -- right? -- to provide those services,

 6      when, eventually, those people get sued.

 7             And let me tell you some ways that employers

 8      will stack the deck against workers even before they

 9      start.

10             They will start in the independent contractor

11      case with an independent contractor agreement.  Oh,

12      it's not an employment agreement; it's an

13      independent contractor agreement.  But in that

14      agreement it will say things, like:

15             You can only bring your case in arbitration.

16      You cannot -- you waive your right to bring your

17      case in a court of law;

18             You can -- must waive any multiple-plaintiff

19      actions.  So you can't bring in your case in court

20      and you can't bring a class-action effectively in

21      state court, or three plaintiffs have to bring three

22      separate arbitrations together in the arbitration

23      proceeding;

24             And you can be required to waive your statute

25      of limitations, from six years under the New York







                                                             215
 1      labor law, where New York labor has a great statute

 2      of limitations.  Very few states can compete with

 3      that;

 4             But as a condition of your employment, you

 5      can't start working here until you sign this.  And

 6      even if you don't sign it, the fact that you're

 7      working here says that you consented enough for us

 8      to say that this can be held against you;

 9             Six years, to six months, statute of

10      limitations, losing a huge amount, more than

11      90 percent of your potential damages.

12             And courts will say those are enforceable.

13             So those issues come up both in the

14      independent contractor misclassification and in

15      standard wage theft cases, where people are subject

16      to forced arbitration class-action waivers in --

17      more than half of New York workers are subject to

18      that.  And it disproportionately affects minorities

19      and women, the largest two demographic groups

20      affected by these agreements.

21             And when we're dealing with this, you know,

22      we have a concept that, you know, the labor law will

23      favor workers.  But they don't look at it in the

24      context of the labor law.  They look at it in the

25      context of contract law; and, look, you agreed to







                                                             216
 1      this contract.

 2             And it doesn't matter that you can't speak

 3      English or read the contract that's written in

 4      English, or that you didn't understand the legalese

 5      of the contract.  Right?

 6             None of that matters once you get on to the

 7      concept of following the contract laws.

 8             And who's writing these laws?

 9             The wage-theft lawyers are writing these

10      agreements to make them -- to enable employers to

11      get away with this -- right? -- to -- particularly

12      in the context of misclassification, where they know

13      this is a misclassification case.

14             The only thing they don't know is if -- the

15      only thing that they are worried about, not that

16      they're doing something illegal, but not getting

17      caught.

18             So the department of labor can't handle the

19      number of cases here.  Independent contractor cases

20      are very difficult to prove because there's many,

21      many factors to an independent contractor

22      misclassification.  No matter how obvious it is, you

23      still got to go through all of those factors.

24      Right?  A lot more work for the department of labor.

25      Maybe they'll just take the guy who doesn't get paid







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 1      for his overtime.

 2             And I will end there, but there is a lot more

 3      to tell you about the subject, and I'm happy to

 4      speak with any of you individually on this.

 5             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you very much, and

 6      thank you both for your testimony.

 7             Senator May.

 8             SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.

 9             I wanted to follow up on the forced

10      arbitration piece.

11             CHRISTOPHER MARLBOROUGH:  Please do.

12             SENATOR MAY:  There is a bill in my committee

13      that's just a sunshine bill, basically, that we need

14      to know how arbitrators -- how the decisions come

15      about, because there's a lot of evidence that the

16      arbitration companies are associated with a lot of

17      the companies that are -- they're arbitrating about,

18      and they tend to decide in favor of the corporate

19      side and against the consumers or the workers.  And

20      nobody knows who they're working for or how -- how

21      the -- what the outcomes are.  They may, you know,

22      99.9 percent of the time be deciding in favor of the

23      big guys.

24             And so I'm just wondering if you have

25      proposals for how to make that whole process more







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 1      fair and more transparent, so that we can -- or are

 2      you aware of this bill and do you support that bill?

 3             CHRISTOPHER MARLBOROUGH:  I'm not aware of

 4      the particular bill you're talking about.

 5             I do know that there -- that outcomes in

 6      arbitration are much less favorable than outcomes in

 7      court.

 8             I also am aware of a lot of the barriers to,

 9      once you get into that arbitration world, you're no

10      longer in a courtroom world.

11             So just as you want to have statistics, you

12      know, I would like that, when a wage thief, when

13      someone misclassifies -- 12 employers who bring

14      12 arbitrations and get 12 separate rulings against

15      them because their misclassification is so obvious,

16      that information is not -- is private.  That

17      information is not shared.  You don't have any

18      precedential value to say, Look, this guy just did

19      this to 12 different people.  And now, look, he's

20      doing it to Number 13.

21             I want to use that evidence, but you don't

22      are have access to that evidence because it's a

23      private proceeding, unlike a case in court.

24             I will also add that some issues -- some ways

25      to work -- deal with the arbitration issue is the







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 1      Empire Bill that Emma just discussed.  Those private

 2      attorney general actions are not subject to

 3      arbitration or class-action waivers because they --

 4      you're taking on the shoes of the attorney general

 5      who is also not subject to that.  That's agreement

 6      between the employee and the employer; or sometimes

 7      not even in the employer.  Sometimes it's just

 8      another company, and the employer says, Well, that

 9      should count for me, too.

10             And the courts, guess what they say?

11             Yeah, okay, it counts for you, too.

12             It doesn't matter that you didn't sign it.

13      None of that matters.

14             Getting out of this rubric where the deck is

15      so heavily stacked against workers, and getting into

16      an opportunity where their claims could be heard and

17      the criminal exploitation can be made public.

18             EMMA KREYCHE:  The Empire Act would bring --

19      essentially, take the -- the -- bring the action

20      back into the public enforcements sphere out of this

21      privatized venue.

22             So that is why the Empire Act is one of the

23      solutions to the issue of forced arbitration.

24             CHRISTOPHER MARLBOROUGH:  I will add that

25      I am admitted in the state of California, and I have







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 1      seen the transformation of this forced arbitration

 2      scenario in California, where it is a completely

 3      different world.  And employers are rightfully

 4      afraid of violating the law.

 5             And I don't believe that that's the case in

 6      New York.

 7             SENATOR MAY:  Okay.  Good to know.

 8             Thank you.

 9             Thank you, Chair.

10             I've got to go, but I really appreciate

11      everybody who has testified, and all that I have

12      learned today.

13             SENATOR MYRIE:  Thank you.

14             Thank you, Senator May.

15             Senator Murray, I don't know if you have any

16      questions.

17             SENATOR MURRAY:  No.

18             SENATOR MYRIE:  Great.

19             Let me express my thanks to both of you.

20             And I will incorporate my closing comments

21      for the entire hearing.

22             The point was very well taken, Emma.

23             How do you pronounce your last name?

24             EMMA KREYCHE:  Kreyche.

25             SENATOR MYRIE:  Kreyche.  I want to make sure







                                                             221
 1      I got that right for the record.

 2             Thank you for making the point that the

 3      ability for us to prevent bad things from happening

 4      to workers and wage theft from happening is not the

 5      sole province of our criminal law.  And that there

 6      are many really good reasons why workers would not

 7      feel comfortable communicating with law enforcement

 8      or pursuing a law enforcement solution.

 9             So we have to also have pretty strong civil

10      enforcement.

11             It's part of the reason why we wanted to do

12      this as two committees, the Codes and the Consumer

13      Protection, so that we could bring both of those

14      views to bear.

15             I think, ultimately, whether it is wage theft

16      or fraud in any other industry, we have a

17      responsibility as a legislature to respond because

18      this is as pocketbook an issue as it gets.  People

19      are, literally, having money taken from them.

20             And if we do not address that part, we are

21      leaving a lot to be desired in way of protecting

22      New Yorkers.

23             So I want to thank you again for the work

24      that you do, for your testimony, for being patient

25      throughout the entire day.







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 1             And I want to thank my colleagues that have

 2      joined and have been in and out.

 3             And let me also thank my staff who did an

 4      excellent job putting all of this together.

 5             I am very grateful for Cody and Zach and

 6      Anslem [ph.] and Liza [ph.] and Godfre and Matt, and

 7      everyone for all of the work that you did; and

 8      Rachel May's staff who helped us put this hearing

 9      together.

10             We look forward to continued engagement.

11             We are hoping to put forward some responses

12      to this hearing, and, hopefully, we'll get to the

13      right solution to protect New Yorkers.

14             So thank you again.

15             And thank you, everyone, for watching.

16             EMMA KREYCHE:  Thank you.

17                (Whereupon, at approximately 1:26 p.m.,

18        the public hearing of the joint committees

19        concluded, and adjourned.)

20

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