Month
After Felton Murder Verdict His Son Chunky
Wants Brady Materials US Withholding
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Periscope,
Photos
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
July 21 – Thirty two days
after James Felton was found
guilty after a jury trial
including video of him
shooting Marvin Harris to
death on East 175th Street in
the Bronx, his son James
"Chunky" Diaz has asked the
government to stop withholding
evidence. Chunky's lawyers
Elizabeth Macedonio and Carla
M. Sanderson have written to U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District Judge
William H.
Pauley III:
"The defense is unaware of
mitigating information
contained in 3500 materials,
including information that may
not have been testified to at
the Felton trial and never
received the video of Romero
brandishing a gun. Moreover,
the government does not comply
with its Brady obligations
through withholding material
and exculpatory information
because it believes the
defense may possess it. “Brady
imposes a constitutional duty
on the government to disclose
evidence favorable to the
accused where such evidence is
material either to guilt or to
punishment.” See United States
v. Djibo, 730 F App'x 52, 56
(2d Cir. 2018) citing Brady v.
Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 87
(1963). This inquiry does not
permit the government to
withhold Brady evidence
because, according to the
government, the defense may be
aware of it. This bears no
relevance to whether the
evidence is favorable and
material, and consequently
whether it must be disclosed.
Moreover, the government’s
reliance on Gaggi is misplaced
because in Gaggi the
government had disclosed the
entirety of the 3500 material
to defendants who were then in
an equal position to draw
inferences from the facts
therein. United States v.
Gaggi, 811 F2d 47, 59 (2d Cir.
1987). Requested Materials The
defense requests any and all
information in the
government’s possession that
is inconsistent with its
theory and/or that harmonizes
with the defense theory. See
United States v Mahaffy, 693
F3d 113, 130 (2d Cir. 2012)
citing United States v.
Triumph Capital Grp., 544 F.3d
149, 164 (2d Cir. 2008). This
includes but is not limited to
all information relating to
Romero’s threats and
mistreatment of Diaz on or
before December 11, 2016,
government witness statements
relating to what occurred in
Diaz’s apartment on December
11 and reasons for individuals
leaving/walking in particular
directions, and what occurred
on the street that night,
including but not limited to
Romero’s threatening
statements and actions, and
any statements or actions by
Diaz wherein he tells others
to “drop the gun” or not to
shoot. This request is
for disclosure of pertinent
grand jury testimony, 3500
material and any unwritten
Brady information from
interviews with witnesses to
the shooting, including
interviews with Ezekiel
Burley, Andre Felton, Gabriel
Gonzalez, and Edwin Romero,
where the events of December
11, 2016 are discussed, and
interviews of any other
witnesses with knowledge of
Romero’s threats against Diaz.
This request also includes a
demand for video depicting
Romero displaying his firearm
on December 11, 2016, which
was not provided to the
defense. "
On
July 10 Willie Reeves who was
portrayed watching the murder
as part of the 240 E. 175 St
drug conspiracy came up for
sentencing.
Defense
attorney Aaron M. Goldsmith
spoke with family and friends
of Reeves out in hall while U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District Judge
William H.
Pauley III
finished up
with a
defendant
describes as
clearing up
matters in The
Bronx whom
Judge Pauley
advised to
look for a job
in an economy
he described
as thriving.
As Inner City
Press jotted
this line down
Reeves family
members filed
in. Taking
detailed notes
no longer
seemed
appropriate.
They listened
as Assistant
U.S. Attorney
Frank
Balsamello
described
Reeves as
merely
watching the
murder of
Harris who had
come to visit
him. A family
member next to
Inner City
Press shook
her head
vehemently.
When it was
Reeves' turn
to speak he
was
understandably
shook up,
facing up to
108 months in
prison. He
first called
Judge Pauley
Mister
Goldsmith,
then Mister
Pauley Three.
Ultimately
Goldsmith who
had emphasized
his work as a
barber in the
MCC and MDS
read the
statement,
while alluding
to but not
requesting a
Fatico hearing
on whether it
was proper to
punish a
defendant like
Reeves who had
pled guilty
but declined
to cooperate.
Judge Pauley
got the
family's
attention by
acknowledging
that Reeves'
brother had
been killed.
He went on to
say that
Reeves' list
of
accomplishments
was thin. He
called the
government's
exhibit of
synchronized
video of the
shootings,
apparently
never uploaded
or distributed
to the media
by the U.S.
Attorney's
office despite
a Press
request, the
most riveting
he has seen in
21 years on
the bench, and
the most
troubling,
that no one
helped.
Judge
Pauley imposed
a sentence on
Reeves at the
lower end of
the
guidelines: 87
months with
five years of
supervised
release.
Reeves
said he wants
to be a
community
organizer.
Inner City
Press will
continue
covering this
Felton,
Reeves, et al
case, and the
related cases
before SDNY
Judge Loretta
Preska, in
which it appears
that a sealed
sentencing was
held on July
9, at least
with the duo
of Assistant
U.S.
Attorneys.
Watch this
site.
Back on June 19
in the culmination of the one
week jury trial of James
Felton, accused among other
things of killing Marvin
Harris on the corner of 175th
Street and Monroe Avenue in
The Bronx on June 11, 2016,
the jury delivered guilty
verdicts on all twelve counts.
Inner City Press asked
Felton's defense lawyer if he
will work on the sentencing
submission. He replied that
there is a mandatory minimum
life sentence. Still, Judge
Pauley III has
set the
sentencing for
October 4.
After the
verdict was
read out,
guilty after
guilty, James
Felton looked
back at a half
dozen people
in the gallery
throughout the
trial, and
pointed at his
heart. Judge
Pauley said to
him, It must
be a difficult
day for you.
Then Judge
Pauley went to
speak with the
jurors.
Earlier
on June 19,
the jury
passed out
notes
requesting a
chart of drug
sales, some of
the video of
the Harris
murder,
Ezekiel
Burley's
testimony on
the Harris
murder, and
Facebook
postings of
defendant
James Felton.
Defense
counsel had
objected to
the indictment
being sent in
to the jury,
and wanted to
make a Rule 29
motion. James
Felton,
smaller than
both of his
lawyers,
glanced around
at the
Bronxites in
the gallery.
It was down to
the small
strokes.
Back
on June 18 in
the
government's
summation,
Assistant US
Attorney Frank
J. Balsemello
said that
James Felton
"is a cold
blooded
murderer." He
described how
James Felton
provided
muscle, or gun
play, to allow
his younger
relatives to
sell crack in
240 East 175th
Street, adding
that it was
lucrative
because it was
so near the
rehab center
PROMESA -- who
as Inner City
Press long ago
reported had
its bookkeeper
shot and
killed on East
Tremont
Avenue.
Balsemello's
multi-media
presentation
used audio
from prison
phone calls
("you have one
minute
remaining")
and pole
camera footage
of the whole
gang dealing
drugs to those
PROMESA
customers. The
jury perked up
at the
complaints of
a resident of
240, about
having to go
to work
walking past
all these guys
- and a lone
female, Ginger
a/k/a George -
dealing crack.
The argument
the government
appears to be
trying to
fight off is
that James
Felton was
somehow
defending not
only his drug
turf but
himself, or
his son James
Diaz a/k/a
Chunky. Inner
City Press
will have more
on this.
On
June 17, the
fifth day of
the trial,
proceedings
ended with
Judge Pauley
setting the
rules for
closing
arguments. The
government
with get an
hour and 45
minutes, then
a 15 minute
reply by
Assistant US
Attorney
Matthew
Hellman.
The defense,
which Judge
Pauley said
pointedly
knows it can
pace around
the room, gets
an hour and a
half. The
docket
reflects that
until right
before trial,
Ms Jean
Barrett was
going to be
among James
Felton's two
lawyers.
There's a
longer story
here, soon to
be told.
Earlier
on June 17 an
NYPD Detective
who arrested
Felton at 2228
Adams Place
testified how
Felton's
pinging cell
phone led them
there, and
about the gun
they found
under a duffle
bag a closet
in Apartment
Six David. But
the monitors
at the defense
table, and in
the jury box
and gallery,
did not work.
Judge Pauley
told the jury
that back in
the old days,
lawyers used
to hand out
photographs of
exhibits; the
Assistant US
Attorney
instead held a
copy out and
walked slowly
in front of
the jury box
while the NYPD
detective
described
putting
Felton's two
phones back in
his pocket for
transfer to
the 46th
Precinct.
There
followed
testimony
about a number
of short phone
calls made on
11 December
2016 when
Benny White
(real name
Jose Morales)
was shot and
killed - for
which James
Felton's son
James Diaz
a/k/a Chunky
has already
pled guilty,
albeit
requesting a
ten year
sentence.
We'll have
more on this.
In the
run-up to the trial James
Felton's lawyer Lloyd Epstein
told the government and
Judge
Pauley that
"we're dealing
with a
neighborhood
here where
people are
talking about
people getting
killed, that
in
neighborhoods
where some of
us live, we
might talk
about how
Johnny was
accepted at
Yale or, you
know,
generally is
going on to
social work
school, but
here, this is
what people
talk about."
But Epstein's
point at the
final
pre-trial
conference on
22 February
2019, beyond
trashing the
Mount Hope
neighborhood,
was to try to
exclude the
introduction
into evidence
of some prison
phone calls.
He said, "They
talk about the
cookouts at
Rikers Island,
they talk
about the NBA,
they talk
about getting
sneakers for
little kids."
Yes, that too.
Though it is
not what is
being heard in
the SDNY
trial. Watch
this site.
On June 14
cooperating witness Andre
Felton described how James
Felton told him he had shot
Benny White, and how he took
the two guns and threw them in
a river. When James Felton
returned from Massachusetts,
Andre Felton let him stay in
his apartment in 2228 Adams
Place.
The
government put into evidence
photographs of that apartment,
with vacuum sealed bags for
selling marijuana, a heroin
spoon and bags, a digital
scale and a gun (which Andre
Felton showed to James Felton,
offering that he could use
it.)
Andre
Felton said that alongside
selling drugs he was working
as a concierge at a building
in Manhattan - full time -
until in a traffic stop he was
found with 10 grams of
cocaine....
Felton's
defense team
later on June
12 asked
Burley if
Felton hadn't
in fact tried
to tell Chunky
to reach a
deal rather
than fight,
and hadn't had
concerns
beyond drug
sales.
This stood at
odds with that
Felton's
lawyer Ms.
Jean D.
Barrett of
Ruhnke &
Barrett said
at the final
pre-trial
conference on
February 22,
2019,
Transcript at
8, that "our
understanding
is that this
is a
neighborhood
where people
sell drugs,
and there's a
lot of
violence in
this
neighborhood.
This is what
this
neighborhood
is like all
the time...
It's just what
the
neighborhood
is and what
everybody in
the
neighborhood
is doing."
Really? Inner
City Press
will continue
to cover this
case, even
without
exhibits. See
@InnerCityPress
and the new @SDNYLIVE.
***
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