STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Federal authorities are garnishing payments to former Rep. Michael Grimm for rental of his New Springville home, after he stopped making payments on a judgment against him in his tax fraud case, sources familiar with the case told the Advance.

According to a report in the Daily News, Grimm had paid $10,250 of the $148,907 in restitution, but federal prosecutors went to court after more than 30 days had elapsed since a payment was made.

A Brooklyn Federal Court judge granted the request by federal prosecutors to garnish rental income on the property to apply toward payment.

Grimm, 47, a former Marine and FBI agent, represented Staten Island and a part of Brooklyn as a Republican from 2011 to 2015. He was indicted in 2014 on charges of multiple criminal conduct.

He spent eight months in prison, beginning September 2015, for filing a false tax return, underreporting income, sales and wages at a Manhattan health food restaurant he owned prior to being elected to Congress. He was released early in May 2016.

Last month the state appellate court nixed his request to reinstate his suspended New York law license until March 15, 2019.