


Former New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio was fined nearly $330,000 for improperly using taxpayer dollars to fund his security detail during his failed 2020 presidential bid.
De Blasio reached a settlement with the Conflict of Interest Board on Wednesday. In it, he agreed to pay back the city for his New York Police Department security detail and pay a $10,000 fine.
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“This settlement brings to a successful conclusion the first ever enforcement action brought by the Board against a Mayor of the City of New York,” the conflicts board wrote in a release.
During his failed four-month bid for the White House, De Blasio took 31 trips outside the city in which he brought a security detail. In one instance, de Blasio used taxpayer dollars to cover the cost of his security detail when he attended a Red Sox game in Los Angeles, the New York Post reported.
In addition to paying the fine, De Blasio wrote an apology.
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“I acknowledge that, by having the city pay for the travel expenses incurred as a result of my security detail traveling with my wife and me during my presidential campaign, and by failing to reimburse the city for these expenses, I acted in conflict with my official duties,” de Blasio wrote in the settlement agreement.
De Blasio was originally fined $475,000, but the board lowered the fine since the former mayor said he could not afford such a high penalty. He will pay $100,000 up front and the remaining $230,000 over a four-year payment plan. If De Blasio misses a payment, he will be required to pay the full amount of the original $475,000 fine.