Bronx House Candidate Had Shadow Career at Defense Contractor

Michael Blake blasted Representative Ritchie Torres for his investments in firms serving the military — but has long worked for one himself, disclosures show.

Will Bredderman   ·   January 6, 2026
A photo collage of Representative Ritchie Torres and Michael Blake in front of images of tanks and screenshots of Blake's campaign video, lambasting Torres for his investments in weapons companies and his support of sending arms to Israel.
Financial disclosures show that Michael Blake has long worked for a military contractor based in Maryland. | Michael Blake photo and screenshots: Michael Blake congressional campaign; Richie Torres photo: Wikimedia Commons; cybersecurity graphic: anyaberkut/Getty Images | Illustration: Leor Stylar

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The opening moments of former Assemblymember Michael Blake’s November video salvo against Representative Ritchie Torres lambaste the Bronx congressman for his investment in aerospace giants such as Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman, which do business with the Pentagon. But financial disclosures show that Blake himself, who served in the state legislature from 2015 until 2021 and ran a failed campaign for mayor last year, has long worked for a military contractor based in Maryland.

“Ritchie Torres invested in weapon makers,” a female voice says at the 11-second mark of Blake’s primary campaign launch video, which features screengrabs of headlines from Sludge and Truthout articles about the congressman’s stock holdings. “He profited from it.”

Blake re-emphasized the theme in a tweet sharing the ad.

“I will invest in the community. Ritchie invests in Bombs,” the candidate wrote.

Yet Blake himself is financially linked to the military-industrial establishment, through his years of employment at Eccalon, a Maryland-based defense firm that public records show has received millions of dollars in Pentagon contracts. Eccalon and its founder, André Gudger — who served as deputy assistant secretary of defense for manufacturing and industrial base policy under President Barack Obama — did not respond to multiple calls and emails for this story.

The candidate and his campaign staff similarly did not answer repeated questions sent by phone and email.

Blake’s financial disclosures reveal he began working for Eccalon as its vice president in 2018, just a year after its formation, and while he still sat in the Assembly. He described his role simply as “advise the president,” and reported it paid him between $5,000 and $20,000. He repeated this description in his 2019 ethics filing, reporting pay in the range of $20,000 to $50,000.

In 2020, Blake mounted an unsuccessful campaign for the seat of retiring then-Rep. Jose Serrano, placing second to Torres in a field of 11 candidates. In a candidate filing with the House Ethics Committee, Blake gave a fuller description of the Eccalon job than he had in any submission in New York State: “Vice President of Engagement, Support President of Company.”

Blake’s public record trail largely vanished after the primary loss, as he spent the subsequent years in the private sector. But his LinkedIn page indicates his work for Eccalon has been continuous, up to the present. Eccalon appears never to have put out a press release or uploaded any information to its website or social media accounts regarding his role.

In 2022, he posted a photo to Instagram of himself at a business networking event in front of a table for Project Spectrum, an Eccalon initiative “supported by the Department of Defense (DoD) Office of Small Business Programs (OSBP)” and “dedicated to enhancing the cybersecurity of the Defense Industrial Base,” according to its LinkedIn page.

In the social media post, Blake shouted out two top Eccalon staffers in the image with him, both of them veterans of the Department of Defense whose responsibilities at the firm involve Pentagon-funded programs.

Blake filed a financial disclosure with the New York City Conflicts of Interest Board for 2024 after he launched his ill-fated campaign for mayor. The document revealed a promotion and a massive pay bump: he listed his salary in the $100,000 to $250,000 range, and his title as president of “Eccalon/Next Level Sports & Entertainment.”

Maryland business records show Next Level Sports & Entertainment formed in 2020 as a separate company from Eccalon. It offers a streaming platform for international basketball games, “elite level lacrosse,” and some college athletic events. The two companies share an owner in Gudger and an office in the Baltimore suburbs, and Eccalon’s website lists NLSE as an affiliate.

Blake attracted scrutiny for moonlighting during his tenure in the Assembly, as he jetted about the nation as a political consultant and Democratic National Committee vice-chair, and introduced pro-Airbnb legislation at the same time as he collected fees from a firm the short-term rental platform had hired. Yet his role at Eccalon has received little attention to date.

Blake has also slammed Torres for the support the congressmember has received from the American Israeli Public Affairs Committee — even though Blake himself has been a perennial attendee and speaker at AIPAC events.

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Will Bredderman stands in front of sign reading Vote Here / Vote Aquí and a chainlink fence
Will Bredderman is an investigative journalist in Brooklyn. His metro reporting has won awards from the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing and the New Jersey Society of Professional Journalists.
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