Insurance giant seeks to question Adams adviser Frank Carone in ‘money laundering’ lawsuit
One of the country’s largest auto insurance companies is seeking to question
The alleged scheme, which was first reported on by the
In a new development, GEICO’s attorneys filed a previously unreported letter in Brooklyn Federal Court in late June notifying the presiding judge they plan to depose Carone during the discovery process in the case. The
A GEICO attorney didn’t respond to emailed questions this week.
Carone, the mayor’s former chief of staff who remains a key adviser to him, isn’t named as a defendant in GEICO’s lawsuit, but the three Financial Vision entities he helped launch are. Asked about the suit last year, Carone said he played “no operational role” in the Financial Vision entities after co-founding them and that he has since “walked away” from them.
A spokesman for Carone also said at the time that his involvement mostly related to lending money to the entities and receiving stock options in exchange for doing so.
On Monday, Carone, a licensed lawyer, said he hasn’t been contacted by GEICO’s attorneys, but that he will sit for a deposition if legally required. “I will follow whatever the law requires,” he told The News in a text.
The letter says GEICO’s lawyers also plan to question all of the suit’s named defendants, including
Incorporation records show Kandhorov co-founded the Financial Vision vehicles with Carone and others. But Kandhorov’s also accused in the GEICO suit of having taken on a leading role in the medical clinics that allegedly pumped out the fraudulent insurance claims.
In a separate legal action in
In their latest court-filed letter, GEICO’s lawyers also notified the judge it plans to seek testimony from a certified public accountant who can speak to the fact that the funding agreements between the Financial Vision entities and the allegedly illegal medical clinics “do not comport with general business practices.” Due to the convoluted financial agreement, GEICO’s suit alleges “the flow of funds” that took place illustrated “a money laundering scheme.”
Legal issues related to no-fault insurance have dogged Carone since the early days of the
Shortly after
Having played a key role in Adams’ first
The
“We will be in a position to finish all campaign fundraising by October, a full eight months ahead of the June primary,” Carone told
Simultaneously with working on Adams’ campaign, Carone’s running Oaktree Solutions, a consulting firm he launched upon leaving
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