Prosecutors said he was part of a trio that received public funds intended to provide emergency housing for recently released inmates in NYC.
Brooklyn’s U.S. attorney said Weihong Hu and two men set out to “line their own pockets” at the height of the pandemic. Ms.
During the pandemic, the founder of a city-funded nonprofit allegedly took $2.5 million in cash kickbacks, plus other gifts, ...
A nonprofit honcho steered $51 million in city covid funding to two shady businesspeople who doled out to him at least $2.5 ...
Julio Medina, Weihong Hu and another co-conspirator pleaded not guilty to charges in the case, revolving around $120 million ...
Julio Medina, the founder and CEO of a non-profit organization, along with two others, has been charged with serious crimes ...
Hu and two codefendants defrauded the COVID-era Emergency Housing Program that released inmates to New York City hotels and provided them with various services, including mental health, security, job ...
Three people were arrested for allegedly defrauding an emergency housing program during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic for personal gain, prosecutors announced Thursday. Clifton Park, New York ...
A taxpayer-funded program to house inmates in hotels during the COVID-19 pandemic became an elaborate fraud conspiracy in ...
Federal prosecutors have alleged that Julio Medina, the founder and CEO of Exodus Transitional Community in New York City, accepted $2.5 million in bribes to direct $51 million in COVID funding to two ...