By then, Hartman was deep into a gambling addiction. He owed $800,000 to Atlantic City casinos and used a PBA escrow account to pay his debts. Then-Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau investigated but brought no charges. Instead, Hartman returned the money and was forced to give up his law license.
He then became the union’s $2-million-a-year labor consultant and made another $2 million in commissions by selling cops MetLife insurance policies. Current PBA president Pat Lynch said Hartman pitched the policies to him. Lynch wasn’t impressed. “I’m not a fan of Richie Hartman,” he said.
Meanwhile, Hartman hooked on with Ron Reale, president of the city’s transit police union. In 1998, he and Reale were convicted of conspiring to defraud the city’s campaign finance board as Reale made a run for public advocate. Also indicted was the Long Island law firm of Lysaght and Kramer, which had assumed Hartman’s practice. Hartman was sentenced to five years in federal prison.
There, Hartman began teaching math to inmates. Upon his release, some police unions outside the city tried to lure him back as a labor consultant. He wouldn’t do it. Through former Queens State Sen. Serphin Maltese, he got a job teaching math at Christ The King, where Maltese is currently chairman of the board. It was there that his life changed.
Or, rather, reverted to what it had been 40 years before.
“He was the first one here in the morning and the last one out of the building,” said Veronica Cokley, the school’s assistant to the president and executive assistant to the board of trustees. “Sometimes he would sleep in the principal’s office. After a long day, you’d literally have to throw him out of the building.”
“He would be there so that, if the kids came in early, they could go to him for help,” Cokley said. “He’d meet anybody, anywhere. After school, if the building wasn’t available, he tutored kids at a nearby Arby’s or Wendy's.”
He took over the school’s math team. “They competed in a league with Stuyvesant and Bronx Science and tied for first place,” Cokley said.
He lived in a basement apartment in Middle Village. “He didn’t have a television,” said Cokley. “He didn’t want one. He said he’d rather read. He said, ‘I’m better off here.’ If there was a big game, he’d come to our house to watch it.”
“It bothered him not to practice law,” she said. Just as he had with cops years before, he put it all into the kids.