


The migrant-services company DocGo is looking to use its multimillion-dollar deal with City Hall to springboard to a massive $4 billion contract with the feds.
CEO Anthony Capone said at a trade conference in Boston last month that DocGo’s $432 million no-bid emergency contract with the Big Apple has given it the “credibility” to go up for the federal arrangement to provide medical services to migrants.
“Now that we are one of the largest care providers for asylum seekers in the country,” Capone said at the Canaccord Genuity’s 43rd annual growth conference in August. “It gives us enormous credibility. And we have references from the city who handles the largest amount.”
“Our application is a lot stronger,” Capone said of the for-profit company.
DocGo was awarded an emergency contract by Mayor Eric Adam’s administration in March to arrange food, medical care and migrant housing but recently came under scrutiny after complaints of mistreatment reached the governor’s office last month.
Gov. Kathy Hochul ordered a review of the non-competitive contract, and the state Attorney General opened an investigation into the claims.