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Exclusive | MTA outsources millions of dollars in legal work to private firms but won't disclose total amount: 'No accountability'
Peter Senzam · 2026-05-11 · via New York Post

The MTA has been hiring pricey private lawyers to defend itself against injury claims — but refuses to reveal the full scale of the outsourced multimillion-dollar legal work and total cost to taxpayers. 

The agency, when pressed by The Post in response to a Freedom of Information Law request, admitted it paid more than $10 million to six law firms in recent years — but sources with knowledge of the situation claim that figure is just the tip of the fiscal iceberg. 

“Millions of dollars are being paid out to outside counsel, and there’s no accountability,” said a lawyer in the MTA division that helps oversee such cases. 

A police officer stands near an overturned orange car and an MTA bus that was involved in an accident.

A cop investigates an accident involving an MTA bus on the Upper East Side in April. Robert Mecea for New York Post

Six current and former MTA law-department employees told The Post the agency has increasingly outsourced such legal work despite having a cadre of in-house lawyers who historically would take on such cases.  

That means taxpayers are shelling out both for the salaries of the MTA’s own lawyers — a team of nearly 60 staffers paid $121,000 a year on average as of 2024, according to court documents — and also for the private firms.

MTA Communications Director Tim Minton responded, “Between Washington policies and ambulance-chasing lawyers, the MTA is increasingly the target of lawsuits, so we need to hire attorneys in the best position to fight back.”

“We have been reviewing how torts litigation is handled, including by in-house lawyers and outside counsel,” he said.

Firefighters and police rescue a man from under the L train at Broadway Junction station.

Lamont Powell of Brooklyn lost an arm and a leg after being hit by a subway in 2018, initially resulting in a $90 million jury verdict. Robert Stridiron for NY Post

The MTA is meanwhile shelling out for record-high court verdicts and settlements — with a total of $687 million paid out between 2019 and 2024.

That figure doesn’t factor in the hundreds of millions of dollars wracked up from recent record-breaking verdicts handled by outside counsel which are still winding through the appeals process.

Aurora Beauchamp, a cancer survivor, won a staggering $72.5 million judgement in 2024 when she sued for injuries sustained when she was hit by an MTA bus.

NYPD and MTA personnel stand behind "CRIME SCENE DO NOT CROSS" tape on a subway platform.

The MTA is shelling out for record-high court verdicts and settlements — with a total of at least $687 million paid out between 2019 and 2024. Luiz C. Ribeiro for NY Post

Staten Island-based law firm Sciretta & Venterina, LLP, which took the case over for the MTA in 2023, was paid nearly $163,000 by the agency for its work — roughly the annual salary of an in-house agency lawyer with six trial cases a year, according to court documents and billing records obtained by The Post.  

In another case, New York-based law firm Armienti, DeBellis & Rhoden, LLP in 2022 took over a lawsuit involving Lamont Powell, a Brooklyn man who lost an arm and a leg after being hit by a subway in 2018.

The resulting judgment of $90 million was one of the largest on record against the MTA, though a judge later knocked down the total award to just under $40 million.

Police tape blocks a subway staircase after a fatal incident in a subway station.

“All these large verdicts are because all these cases are being handled by outside counsel,” a source claimed. Luiz C. Ribeiro for NY Post

The law firm billed the cash-strapped agency $227,000, according to records obtained through The Post’s FOIL requests.  

That’s roughly the equivalent of 18 months of pay for an in-house MTA lawyer who would traditionally handle around 10 trials in that same timeframe, according to agency law-department sources.

“All these large verdicts are because all these cases are being handled by outside counsel,” a source alleged, claiming private lawyers would typically be more focused on billable hours than resolving legal disputes.

Neither law firm responded to a list of questions sent to them by The Post last week. 

Commuters walk along a subway platform next to a stopped train.

Exactly how much taxpayers are shelling out for these private lawyers, and how many cases they’re taking, remains a mystery — despite repeated Post requests for the data. Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Post

But exactly how much taxpayers are shelling out for these private lawyers and how many cases they’re taking, remains a mystery — despite repeated Post requests for the data.

More than a year ago, The Post filed a Freedom of Information request for annual billing totals for the selection of six firms that were listed on the MTA’s approved list of outside counsel, as well as for the total amount shelled out for the use of outside counsel.

The MTA said it paid more than $10 million to the six firms between 2019 and 2024 — but claimed it could not provide how much it had spent total on such outside counsel or the number of cases handed over to private lawyers. 

Meanwhile, total payroll for the MTA torts department handling such claims was around $7 million in 2024, according to court documents.

The agency’s FOIL department claimed its 30-year-old database was so old that getting such information would be impossible and that it had no such records. 

A city bus involved in an accident is on East Houston St and Columbia, NYC, with police investigating the scene.

Between 2019 and 2024, six firms were paid $10 million for their legal work for the MTA. William C Lopez for NY Post

An MTA rep later said the agency does track the amounts and sends them annually to an independent auditor — but did not provide any audit reports upon request.

Of the six firms, Armienti, DeBellis & Rhoden was the highest-paid, earning more than $5 million in taxpayer cash for the time frame, according to records obtained via FOIL. Three other firms were paid more than $1 million each in that five-year span. 

Records show spending to those six firms spiked after lawyer Anna Ervolina took over as deputy general counsel for the MTA Law Department in 2021 — from $1.2 million that year to more than $2.6 million in 2023 and $2.1 million in 2024. 

Ervolina did not respond to a series of questions and a request for comment.

MTA whistleblowers in the law department warned that the eye-watering amounts the MTA has paid out in settlements and judgments could snowball if the trend continues.

Police officers investigate a shooting on an MTA bus in New York City.

Cops probe a shooting involving an MTA bus outside Central Park last year. Christopher Sadowski

The $687 million paid out between 2019 to 2024 doesn’t even include more recent headline-grabbing payouts mostly helmed by outside counsel that are still in the appeals process.

“You can bring a frivolous claim to the transit authority, and you’ll win. And that’s what plaintiffs are saying,” an MTA lawyer said. “That’s the reputation they have now.”

The MTA’s Office of Inspector General declined to comment but confirmed that its oversight covers the entire agency, including vendors and subcontractors. 

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Officials from the state comptroller’s office were unable to immediately comment but have conducted audits in the past examining the MTA’s use of outside counsel in collecting tolls, recommending in 2017 that they transition the work in-house.

That recommendation was “partially implemented” as of 2021.

Other whistleblowers alleged that the MTA has even stopped sending its own investigators to the scenes of accidents to collect evidence that could be used to fight future possible fraud in the courtroom. 

The MTA New York City Subway logo on a subway car door.

“The only thing the MTA is investigating now is what’s for lunch,” said a recently retired investigator. dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images

“The only thing the MTA is investigating now is what’s for lunch,” said a recently retired investigator.

All of the sources said Ervolina has not been in the office for years, despite a return-to-office mandate for state agency employees 

“If you’ve been sitting in your house for the last five or six years, you don’t know what is going on in the office — you have no clue,” said a current MTA claims investigator.

An MTA rep said Ervolina has agency approval to work from home but could not specify further.