logo
Queens Defenders founder Lori Zeno pleads not guilty to stealing $60K to fund luxury lifestyle

Queens Defenders founder Lori Zeno pleads not guilty to stealing $60K to fund luxury lifestyle

Yahoo19-06-2025

Lori Zeno, the disgraced founder of the Queens Defenders who's accused of raiding the public defender nonprofit's coffers to maintain a luxe lifestyle in a penthouse apartment, pleaded not guilty to wire fraud charges at her first appearance in federal court Wednesday.
Zeno, 64, and her ex-con boyfriend, Rashad Ruhani, 55, were indicted last week on charges they stole some $60,000 for personal expenses, using their organization's accounts to pay the rent for their $6,000-a-month Astoria penthouse apartment, which they claimed was being used for 'client defense' and 'foster parent care.'
Queens Defenders provides legal representation to criminal defendants who can't afford to hire lawyers.
The couple used the nonprofit's credit cards and the rewards points they accrued to pay for their honeymoon to Bali, and spent big at Louis Vuitton, Bloomingdale's, Ralph Lauren and Neiman Marcus stores, the feds allege.
They bought an 85-inch television for $3,300, paid for a $2,600 steak dinner, and got their teeth whitened for $600, the feds allege. Zeno used a Queens Defenders credit card to pay for a December vacation at a resort in Santa Monica, Calif., according to court documents.
On Wednesday, she appeared in Brooklyn Federal Court, where Magistrate Judge Joseph Maritolo set her bond at $500,000 secured by her sister, brother-in-law and son.
'Some things are not quite what they appear to be,' her lawyer, Anthony Ricco, said outside the courtroom Wednesday, adding that he's still learning about the case against Zeno, who is barred from contacting Ruhani as part of her bail conditions.
Zeno served as the executive director of the Queens Defenders from 2018 until she was forced out of the job in January and Ruhani was fired.
She hired Ruhani, who was paroled after 26 years in state prison in 2022 for a robbery conviction, as a client advocate in October 2023, and started a romance soon after, according to court documents.
In August 2024, Zeno and Ruhani were married in a religious ceremony, but prosecutors don't believe the marriage is legally recognized since 'both Zeno and Ruhani were married to other individuals,' they wrote in a June 11 filing seeking Ruhani's detention.
Zeno promoted Ruhani in June 2024 to a position overseeing Queens Defenders' youth programs, the feds allege, and Zeno hired Ruhani's relatives and associates, including his daughter, to positions where they 'did little or no substantive work,' according to the court filing.
In November, Zeno hired a woman Ruhani had married about a decade earlier as a $60,000-a-year director of a nonexistent 'health and wellness' program, the feds said. The woman, who lives in Saudi Arabia, never showed up for work, according to prosecutors.
Ruhani was arrested last week. Prosecutors asked he be locked up because of his record and his ties to Saudi Arabia.
Queens Defenders received roughly $368,000 in federal funds via the city Department of Housing Preservation and Development. The couple is charged with theft of federal funds and wire fraud.
Earlier this year, the city reassigned the group's contracts to Brooklyn Defenders, a separate nonprofit that represents poor defendants in that borough.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pam Bondi fires three Jan. 6 prosecutors, sending another chill through DOJ workforce
Pam Bondi fires three Jan. 6 prosecutors, sending another chill through DOJ workforce

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Pam Bondi fires three Jan. 6 prosecutors, sending another chill through DOJ workforce

WASHINGTON — At least three federal prosecutors who worked on cases against Jan. 6 rioters were fired Friday by the Justice Department, according to more than half a dozen current and former officials familiar with the dismissals. A copy of one of the dismissal letters seen by NBC News was signed by Attorney General Pam Bondi, notifying the recipient that they were 'removed from federal service effective immediately.' No reason for the removal was stated in the letter. One of the fired employees had been based overseas. The Justice Department declined to comment Friday night. Follow live politics coverage here. The Trump administration in late January fired probationary federal prosecutors who worked on Jan. 6 cases and prosecutors who worked on former special counsel Jack Smith's investigation into President Donald Trump. The administration also demoted some career prosecutors who worked on the Capitol siege investigation. Probationary workers are either recent hires or have taken new positions. The firings on Friday, though, marked the first time that career prosecutors who had worked Jan. 6 cases and who were past their probationary period of federal employment had been fired. It was also the first time Bondi fired Justice Department lawyers involved in prosecuting Jan. 6 cases. Bondi was confirmed by the Senate in February, after the dismissal of probationary prosecutors. The firings come at a time when the fallout from the Jan. 6 investigation — and Trump's subsequent mass pardon of even the most violent rioters — continues to loom over employees at both the Justice Department and the FBI. Numerous current and former officials have told NBC News that the targeting of people who worked on the largest investigation in FBI history have had a chilling effect on the Justice Department workforce, and would leave career prosecutors and FBI officials hesitant to pursue cases against any Trump allies for fear of being targeted by the administration. One federal law enforcement official called Friday's firings 'horrifying' and noted that both of the prosecutors had been serving in other capacities before the 2024 election. 'To fire them, without explanation, is a slap in the face not only to them, but to all career DOJ prosecutors,' the official said. 'No one is safe from this administration's whims and impulses. And the public certainly is not served by the continued brain drain of DOJ — we are losing the best among us every day.' This article was originally published on

Bret Bielema calls out Kirby Smart, Georgia for tampering
Bret Bielema calls out Kirby Smart, Georgia for tampering

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Bret Bielema calls out Kirby Smart, Georgia for tampering

The post Bret Bielema calls out Kirby Smart, Georgia for tampering appeared first on ClutchPoints. When a college football player receives communication from another team about playing for said team before the player has entered the transfer portal, it is called tampering. Tampering is a big problem in college sports, and it is against the rules. However, it's abundantly clear that it happens all the time, and there are rarely any punishments for it. For example, Illinois football head coach Bret Bielema is pretty confident that Kirby Smart and Georgia tampered with his running back Josh McCray. Advertisement Josh McCray was one of the best players on the Illinois football team last season, but he now resides in Athens, Georgia. He entered the transfer portal this past offseason, and it didn't take him very long to land with the Bulldogs. 'We did lose a guy to Georgia,' Bielema said during a recent episode of The Triple Option. 'Somehow, he found his way to the portal and 12 hours after being in the portal, he was on a flight to Georgia. I don't know how that happened, but it's crazy. Wish Josh all the best. He took advantage of that opportunity.' McCray had over 600 rushing yards and 10 touchdowns last season for the Fighting Illini. Losing him hurts, but Bielema has a lot of confidence in this year's running back room. It reminds him of a special one that he had back in the day at Wisconsin. 'I'm very excited,' Bielema said. 'We had three guys last year that are coming back to us that are very special. And it's kind of like what I had when I was at Wisco. I had a roster one year John Clay was a fifth-rounder to Pittsburgh, big 260-pound bruiser, just a workout (warrior). Behind him was a guy by the name Montee Ball, ended up being a second-round pick to the Denver Broncos.' Advertisement Just those players would make for an incredibly stacked RB room, but Bielema wasn't finished. 'Then behind him was this young guy named James White, who was the Freshman Big Ten Player of the Year,' he continued. 'Then there was this other guy, Melvin Gordon, who became a first-rounder. Those four guys were on one roster. All four of them were just a little bit different, and that's kind of what I've got going now.' Tampering is a huge problem in college football, and Bret Bielema thinks that his team was a victim of it this offseason. However, the Illinois football team is going with a next man up mentality, and Bielema is confident that the Fighting Illini will be successful at the RB position. Related: North Carolina, Bill Belichick lands ex-Alabama commit to bolster secondary Related: Lee Corso's son is 'disappointed' by College GameDay's Ohio State selection

Bear spotted making friends with coyote in California
Bear spotted making friends with coyote in California

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Bear spotted making friends with coyote in California

This is the unexpected moment a bear and a coyote come face-to-face - and end up making friends. Footage shared by Altadena Sheriff's Station, in Los Angeles on Tuesday (24 June) shows the unlikely pair encountering each other underneath a bush at night. The pair stare at each other for a few moments, before nuzzling their noses on the other and standing side by side for a few more seconds. The police station shared the sweet interaction online with the caption: When you and your coworker finally take that lunch break walk you've been talking about all week.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store