Sidney
Scales Trial in SDNY Has Cooperators in
Hunts Point With Child's Travel Paid For,
Guns
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon Song
BBC
- Guardian
UK - Honduras
- The
Source
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
July 20 – Defendant Sidney
Scales is facing trial this
month, and now gets data on
the jury venire. His
former co-defendant Ernest
Horge back on February 27,
2020 said in open court that
it is unfair he is in the same
case as Scales, charged with
capital murder.
On November 11,
2020, Veterans Day, the US
Attorney's Office announced a
superseding indictment that
formally charges Scales with
murder, and keeps Horge linked
to him: "In the Superseding
Indictment, SCALES is charged
with causing another person to
shoot at rival drug dealers on
June 9, 2017, in the vicinity
of 1135 East Tremont Avenue in
the Bronx, New York, causing
the death of Joshua
Lopez. SCALES and HORGE
are also charged in the
Superseding Indictment with
engaging in multiple specific
drug sales between November
2018 and February 2019, in
addition to the narcotics
conspiracy charged in the
initial indictment." The case
was reassigned to Judge Jed S.
Rakoff, the docket said.
Now in July
Judge Rakoff has ordered:
"ORDER as to Sydney Scales: IT
IS HEREBY ORDERED that the
Metropolitan Correctional
Center (MCC) permit daily
visits with Mr. Scales's
counsel and that such access
should begin immediately and
continue through the trial in
this matter; scheduled to
begin July 20, 2021, IT IS
FURTHER ORDERED that the
Metropolitan Detention Center
(MDC) and the MCC
expeditiously transfer Mr.
Scales's personal possessions
from the MDC to the MCC,
including, but not limited to,
the discovery mailed to Mr.
Scales from the United States.
(Signed by Judge Jed S. Rakoff
on 7/14/2021)."
On July 20,
Judge Rakoff held a proceeding
and ruled on a series of
motions in limine. He also
endorsed the defense's request
that John Doe who had
proffered with the government
but now cites the Fifth
Amendment be deemed
unavailable for trial.
Judge
Rakoff told the lawyers to
appeal on July 22 at 9 am in
Courtroom 24B, with the jury
to arrive at 9:45 for opening
statements.
On July 22, the
defense told the jury that
while Scales did sell some
crack that they will see, he
did not order or commit a
murder. Then the evidence
began, with a crime scene unit
police officer, describing
beach chairs and blood on East
Tremont Avenue.
On July 23, the
prosecution put on the stand a
transit police officer who
covered the 2 and 5 line, from
Intervale Avenue to 180th
Street. He described hearing
gun shots and coming down, and
a chase down 178th Street. A
cooperator described going to
Hunts Point with a gun to
collect money.
Another
cooperator, a woman,
acknowledged that in
connection with her testimony,
the US Attorney's Office paid
for her and her child's
travel. Judge Rakoff inquired
into whether the victim's text
messages are hearsay; he asked
counsel to answer his
questions and not volunteer
information.
The case is US v.
Scales, 19-cr-96
(Rakoff).
***
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