An attorney from Garden City pleaded guilty to stealing more than $5 million in connection with a number of real estate transactions over a four-year period.
The defendant is expected to be sentenced to three to nine years in prison and is required to pay $1,000,000 in partial upfront restitution. As a consequence of the defendant’s pleas of guilty to felony charges, he will no longer be licensed to practice law. Boldi faces four to12 years in prison if he fails to pay the full upfront restitution amount by the time of his sentence. He is due back in court for sentencing on April 17, 2025.
“Daniel Boldi posed as a trusted professional in real estate transactions and orchestrated elaborate schemes that defrauded nearly four dozen prospective homeowners, real estate brokers, and even a volunteer ambulance corps out of more than five million dollars,” said DA Donnelly. “Daniel Boldi’s guilty plea is a step towards financially restoring the lives of the victims he devastated through his schemes. NCDA will continue to hold accountable those who abuse positions of trust for their own selfish gain and who undermine the trust of individuals and families wading into the real estate market.”
Between September 8, 2020, and January 17, 2024, Daniel Boldi — an attorney experienced in real estate transactions who owned and operated his law firm, Boldi Law Group, P.C. — embezzled a total of $5,780,424 from 46 victims, ranging from individual homeowners to real estate agents, and other entities for whom he held money in escrow.
Boldi committed escrow thefts that totaled $4,630,424 from victims who worked with him on sales of their property or the purchasing of new property.
In one scheme, on October 31, 2023, a couple worked with Boldi on the closing of the sale of their home in East Meadow. The defendant acted as the settlement agent for the mortgage lender used in connection with the transaction.
Upon receipt of the loan funds from the home buyer’s mortgage company, Boldi was to distribute $309,367 to the couple’s mortgage lender to pay off the remainder of the mortgage on the East Meadow home.
Boldi falsely told the couple that the wire transfer from the buyer’s lender were not posted to his escrow account, and the funds were not available at the time of the closing. Based upon Boldi’s false representation that the funds were not posted yet, the parties agreed to a “dry closing,” and the deed to the home was held in escrow.
Days later, on November 2, 2023, Boldi provided the couple with a fraudulent copy of what he purported to be a wire request for the mortgage payoff amount, as proof that the funds were sent to the couple’s mortgage company. As a result, the deed was released, and the sale was completed. However, the wire transfer was never sent to the couple’s mortgage company. The mortgage payoff funds were never provided to the lender, and the couple has been forced to continue making mortgage payments on a home they no longer own.
In another scheme, Boldi also provided a private lender with a fraudulent mortgage and title closing records, embezzling $1.15 million through two separate loan thefts between September 8, 2020, and November 7, 2023.
According to bank records, Boldi used the funds he stole on various personal expenses unrelated to the victims’ transactions, including Venmo payments to other individuals and property investments.
Boldi, 49, surrendered to NCDA Detective Investigators on April 10, 2024. On October 17, 2024, Boldi pleaded guilty before Judge Caryn Fink to 13 counts of Grand Larceny in the Second Degree (a Class C felony) and one count of Scheme to Defraud in the First Degree (a Class E felony).