In SDNY Trial Iranian Banker
Nejad Got Late Notice From US Which Says Court
Responds to Court
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Thread,
Patreon
Song
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
March 8 – Iranian banker Ali
Sadr Hashemi Nejad is on
trial, charged with money
laundering and violating US
sanctions including through a
Venezuelan infrastructure
project. He is represented by
lawyer Reid Weingarten of
Steptoe & Johnson and, on
November 25 as reported
by Inner City Press by Brian
M. Heberlig
before U.S. District Court for
the Southern District of New
York Judge Alison J. Nathan.
On Sunday,
March 8 [alongside this song]
the US Attorney Office which
is slated to
close its case
on March 9 past
9 pm submitted a letter with a
strange beginning: "Dear Judge
Nathan: The Court writes
in response to the Court’s
order from 9:00 this evening.
The Government apologizes for
the lack of clarity in its
prior email. The
Government found GX 411 in its
emails on Friday night, looked
at the Bank-1 subpoena
production, and did not find
it. The members of the team
discussed the document the
next morning and confirmed
that it likely had not been
produced to the defense
previously. The Government
promptly had a paralegal mark
it as an exhibit and produced
it to the defense along with
other exhibits and 3500
materials. The Government made
clear that GX 411 was a newly
marked exhibit and that we
intended to offer it, and
asked the defense if they
would stipulate to
authenticity. Defense counsel
responded shortly after the
Government provided GX 411 and
asked how long the Government
had GX 411, and why they had
not previously received it.
The Government responded and
explained that we had been
aware of the letter since
mid-January, and that, at the
time, the Government had
mistakenly believed it was
part of the discovery in the
case. When SAUSA Lynch
sent what is now GX 411 to the
AUSAs in the case in January,
the AUSAs assumed that this
was a document that came from
this case (specifically, the
subpoena to Bank-1), and that
it was therefore a document
that had been previously
produced to the defense as
part of the Rule 16 discovery.
This was an incorrect
assumption." Well, something
is incorrect.
Earlier on March
8: "This weekend, AUSA Lake
came upon GX 411 in Outlook
while organizing emails
related to this case and
others. At the time, AUSA Lake
concluded that the Government
may wish to offer GX 411 in
its case in chief, consulted
the other members of the
prosecution team, marked GX
411 as an exhibit, and emailed
it to defense counsel.
It was only in the context of
this process that the
Government realized that GX
411 was not part of Bank-1’s
subpoena production, which had
been provided to the defense
in discovery. Government
Exhibit 411 is a voluntary
disclosure that Bank-1 made to
OFAC after clearing a payment
from an entity affiliated with
PDVSA in Venezuela to Stratus
International Contracting (the
“Payment”), which was one of
the entities the defendant
used to receive payments on
behalf of IIHC. In the
voluntary disclosure, dated
June 16, 2011, Bank-1 noted
that it had processed the
Payment on April 4, 2011, but
flagged it for potential money
laundering after the fact, on
April 20, 2011. The disclosure
goes on to note that, after
the Payment was alerted,
Bank-1 investigated Stratus
and learned that “Stratus was
founded in 1978 in Tehran,
Iran; Stratus International
specializes in providing
contracting services to
infrastructure projects such
as roads, railways, dams,
tunnels, airports and
buildings; Stratus is
presently working on a 7000
Apartment Unit ‘New Ojeda’
Housing Development Project in
Venezuela.” It further
reported that, on May 12,
2011, Bank-1 received a
response to its inquiry to the
remitter bank, stating, in sum
and substance, that Stratus’s
address is in Turkey, it is
registered in Turkey, it does
construction in, among other
places, Venezuela, and the
payment was for the
“construction of a 7000
apartment unit project” in
Venezuela. Bank-1
concluded that “Although
Stratus is not listed as an
SDN, and the payment does not
indicate any direct
involvement of Iran or with
Iran, due to conflicting
information between the
website and the response
forwarded by the bank in
Caracas, [Bank-1] believes it
appropriate to share this
information with OFAC since
Stratus may be an Iranian
Company. We have added Stratus
into our sanctions filter to
monitor any future
payments.” GX 2032 and
2034 show that Bank-1 sent a
series of questions to the
remitter bank on April 27,
2011 related to the Payment.
Those questions were
ultimately forwarded to the
defendant. The defendant
responded with misleading
information, including by
failing to answer one of the
questions posed about the
identity of the beneficial
owners and Citizenship of the
owners of Stratus
International Contracting. II.
The Defendant’s Brady Claim
Based on conversations the
Government has had with
defense counsel this weekend,
the Government now understands
how GX 411 advances the
defendant’s claim that any
decision by OFAC not to take
enforcement action following
this disclosure is probative
of the risk of harm from OFAC
enforcement that banks face
when they process transactions
in violation of the sanctions
laws. The Government is
currently seeking to confirm
whether OFAC took any action
based on Bank-1’s disclosure,
and is willing to stipulate
that OFAC did not take action
against Bank-1, the Stratus
entities, or the
defendant... The
Government regrets its error
and is working to confirm that
there is nothing else related
to the Bank-1 investigation
that has any bearing in this
case, and that there have been
no other omissions from the
materials produced to the
defense, both at the U.S.
Attorney’s Office and DANY.
And, in light of our late
disclosure of GX 411, we will
not seek to offer it at trial.
To the extent the defense
wishes to offer GX 411 in its
case, the Government has no
objection and will stipulate
to its admissibility. As a
result, the defendant is not
prejudiced by the late
disclosure, and in light of
the fact that they have not
begun to present evidence, no
curative instruction relating
to the timing of the
Government’s disclosure is
necessary."
Back on
March 4 the defendant's St.
Kitts and Nevis "citizenship
by investment" passport was
inquired into by the US - his
lawyers pointed out that
Canada has a similar program
-- and a material witness
testified about the Venezuela
project. Inner City Press live
tweeted thread
here.
On cross
examination he was implicitly
accused of having violated
Iran sanctions by accepting by
wire a $50,000 payment from
the defendant's father. Inner
City Press earlier in the week
reported on this witness
getting his own free lawyer,
back dated to December 2019
when he began speaking with
the US Attorney's Office, here.
More on Patreon here.
After jury
selection on March 2, the
opening arguments took place
on March 3, and Inner City
Press live tweeted them,
thread here.
In sum, while the government
said it will show that Ali
Sadr intentionally evaded
sanctions, Weingarten
portrayed Ali Sadr as hating
the Mullahs and having a "pure
heart," only want to help his
father.
A witness
speaking in Farsi was
laboriously questioned by
Assistant US Attorney Michael
Krause about the Venezuela
project. More on Patreon here.
Back
on November 25, Heberlig
argued at length for the
suppression and return of
emails seized, saying that
looking for emails about money
laundering was too broad. He
insisted that his clients
project in Venezuela was pure
business, and that the
government should have have
been looking into his trips to
Iran.
As a civil
libertarian, the arguments
were attractive. In a
courthouse where less affluent
defendants are processed
through in much different
ways, less so.
The
government has two weeks to go
page by page through their May
2018 420 PDFs; the defense got
the same two weeks to pick out
their seven or so worst
examples of overreach. Two
senior AUSA who sat through
most of the argument left
before Heberlig's
final barrage.
For those
keeping score,
the government
ceded
most ground
in this
hearing.
Meanwhile in
the
Magistrates
Court on less
fancy crimes
they are
requesting
detention in
nearly every
case. Inner
City Press
will have more
on this.
At
the earlier Curcio hearing
while adding prior Steptoe
clients Citibank, UBS and
Commerzbank to Steptoe's
script, Nathan found the Sadr
knowingly waived all conflicts
of interest.
Then a
surprise: Assistant US
Attorney Michael K. Krouse
acknowledged that yet to be
turned over are e-mails from
seven custodian other than
Sadr, somehow lost in the
cracks of the case. Judge
Nathan gave Krouse a week to
provide a status update, with
full production to be
completed in two weeks and a
response by Steptoe a week
after that. They will be
seeking to exclude these
e-mails.
On the
bracelet removal request,
Judge Nathan said she saw no
reason to do it. Weingarten
replied that Pre-Trial favors
it, and that he wants to meet
with Sadr until midnight. The
government's position will be
known in a week and more from
Steptoe if the government
opposes either. It's good to
have money, in essence. This
is not how lower income
defendants are often treated
in the SDNY. The case is USA v.
Nejad, 18-cr-00224
(Nathan). More on Patreon here
O
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