The former afternoon drive-time talker for WNNK radio in Harrisburg was arrested at his apartment on Wall Street on May 20.
United Parcel Service had contacted authorities when it learned that Bond was using a shipping account that had been opened with a stolen credit card, prosecutors said.
Bond, an Allentown native, pleaded not guilty on Friday in Manhattan's state Supreme Court. He was held in $250,000 bond and told to return to court July 23.
Bond's lawyer, Patrick Megaro, said his client "is absolutely not the ring leader. He is merely a cog in the wheel."
The complicated scheme involved Bond sending bogus checks drawn on various corporate accounts to work-at-home job seekers, some of whom had responded to "job opportunities" ads on Craigslist, prosecutors said.
Bond created the fraudulent checks, using the names of various companies and their bank account numbers, and sent them to the names and addresses provided by the overseas accomplices, prosecutors said.
The payees would cash the checks, keep 10 percent and send the rest to Bond's overseas accomplices, prosecutors said. The overseas accomplices allegedly got their money before the check casher was notified by his bank that he had cashed a phony check.
The overseas accomplices sent Bond weekly payments that totaled about $1,500 for his role, prosecutors added.
Prosecutors said investigators found hundreds of envelops, blank check paper, computer equipment and printers in Bond's apartment.
The total amount of the checks recovered to date was $4,289,594.77. The amounts on the fake checks ranged from $1,500 to $47,000, prosecutors said.