In
SDNY Defendant Montanez Elias
Pleads Guilty on Narcotics As
Batts Asks If Knew It Was
Wrong
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Periscope,
Photos
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
April 30 – Nearly alone in the
large U.S.
District
Court for the
Southern
District of
New York Judge
Batts
defendant
Montanez Elias
on April 30
pled guilty to
drug charges,
culpable, set
for a
sentencing on
September 10.
He will remain
in detention
until then,
brought into
Judge Batts'
courtroom and
shackles and
taken out the
same way.
Judge Batts
previously
said that
Probation and
PRS could not
produce a PSR
on an
expedited
basis due to
under-funding,
even as other
judges order
it. She asked
Montanez
Elias, Did you
know it was
wrong? Yes he
did. And so it
goes in the
SDNY.
Moments
later a drug defendant with
her hair in a bun and family
members in the front row of a
largely empty courtroom on
April 30 asked SDNY
Judge
Sidney Stein
to make the
government
disclose the
identity of
the
confidential
informant
against her.
Judge Stein
ordered the
government to
respond and
that, off the
record he said
but in open
court, joked
with her
lawyer that
his son should
obey that
father because
"he knows his
avocados."
Judge Stein's
courtroom
deputy
attested to
that the son
had once
before
assisted the
father in the
courtroom. It
was family
affair,
replete with
amazement that
on WhatsApp
the
confidential
informant
could erase a
message not
only in his
own account,
but in that of
the defendant.
A motion to
suppress will
following, and
Inner City
Press and the
new @SDNYLIVE
feed on
Twitter will
continue on
it.
Hours after five
conspiracy defendants were
asked through counsel if they
have enough access to
headphones and a shared
paralegal in the SDNY,
upstairs Ramel
Jackson was
sentenced to
110 months in
prison for,
among other
things,
shooting a gun
at a Bronx
baby shower.
In the
courtroom with
Jackson and
the U.S.
Marshalls were
five
relatives, and
Inner City
Press.
SDNY Judge
Lorna G.
Schofield said
she disagreed
with the
calculation of
the
appropriate
guidelines,
putting the
offense level
at 27 rather
than 29 but
eschewed any
discount to
26. After
hearing of the
shootouts in
the Millbrook
housing
projects, a
trial on which
Inner City
Press covered
earlier this
year, and of
Ramel Jackson
in prison
being deprived
of telephone
privileges as
punishment,
she advised
him to find in
a trade in the
nine years and
two months she
sentenced him
to.
He blew a kiss
to his two
aunts and two
brothers in
the 11th floor
courtroom as
sun streamed
in from out on
Foley Square.
Some of the
Sentencing
Guidlines
argument was
drowned out by
business
litigants
loudly leading
Judge Jesse
Furman's
courtroom
across the
hall (from
which, before
the
sentencing,
Inner City
Press was told
of another man
in jail in
connection
with a zebra
in a zoo, on
which we hope
to have more).
Ramel
Jackson's
defense lawyer
read a quote
about the
fragmentation
of gangs in
Chicago she
said had come
to her via a
listserv, and
said if there
are any
violations of
Jackson's five
years of
supervised
release by the
time he serves
it, she will
have closed
her office.
She had asked
for a sentence
of 74 months;
Probation had
asked for 120.
On the matter
of general
deterence it
remains
striking how
little
covering these
type of
sentences in
the SDNY and
other Federal
courts
receive, how
little
scrutiny there
is. Watch this
site, and on
Twitter the
new @SDNYLIVE
feed.
Back on April
3 when
defendant Jamel Jones arrived
to plead guilty SDNY
Judge Paul A.
Engelmayer, his
lawyer
informed the
court that the
government had
agreed to not
seek forfeiture
or restitution.
Judge Engelmayer
looked at the
plea agreement
and said that was
not in there.
Now
on April 30
Judge
Engelmayer held a
joint conference in the
large case,
inviting lawyers
and six defendants:
FUGUAN LOVICK,
ROLAND MARTIN,
AARON YOUNG,
ANTHONY
ELLISON,
DENARD BUTLER,
and, KINTEA
MCKENZIE. Five
were Courtroom
110, with U.S.
Marshals and
enough
audience to
have the
conference
moved from Judge Engelmayer's
usual
courtroom 1305 (with
there being
any notice on
the door of
1305, it was
noted).
The
government
described
trying to
crack a phone
with an algorithm, about
having to send
gloves from a
shooting out
to a private
lab since the
Office of the
Chief Medical
Examiner
would only test
the jacket.
Kintea
McKinzie, it
was said, was
linked to a
shooting by a
water bottle
that was
dropped on
video
surveillance.
The MCC
but not the
MDC allows the
defense lawyers to
send in
headphones for
their clients
to review
discovery, 49 disk
each. There
was talk of a
common
paralegal.
Pressed, the
government predicted
that "less
than three" of
the remaining
defendants
would in fact
go all the way
to trial, set
to start on September
4. Judge Engelmayer
tried to find
a motion
schedule that
would prevent
having to
litigate in late August.
We'll have
more on this.
As to
Jamel Jones,
the
sentencing
range agreed
to is 135 to
168 months,
significantly
longer than fellow
Nine Trey Gangster
Bloods defendant
Faheem Walters, who pled less
than an hour
before, agreed
to: 68 to 74
months with a
five year
minimum. Walter's
allocution
was that after
"the incident"
in
Manhattan exactly
one year ago
on 3
April 2018,
Kifano Jordan
handed the gun to
Daniel Hernandez
a/k/a
Tekashi
6ix9ine who
in turn, on
the way
back to Brooklyn,
handed it to Faheem
Walter. There
is a mandatory
five year
sentence,
maximum
(without
appealing) of
74 months. Walter's
sentencing is
on July 10; Jones
is set for
July 17.
Back on March 28
Daniel Hernandez was brought
for his Curcio hearing before
Judge Paul A.
Engelmayer, he
had
four colored
braids and
face tattoos
and a wide
smile. He
conferred
with Dawn
Florida, his
non-conflicted
counsel as the
docket puts
it, but also
with the
allegedly
conflicted
lawyer Lance
Lazzaro. Then
Judge
Engelmayer
began his
questions,
about
Hernandez' GED
and if he
understood and
accepted the
possible
conflict of
interest.
Only that
morning
co-defendant
Kifano Jordan
pled guilty.
But Faheem
Walter, whom
Lazzaro also
represented in
the past, had
not yet pled
guilty. The
case
overall
is U.S. v.
Jones et al,
18-cr-00834-PAE,
a/k/a Nine
Trey Gangster
Bloods.
Hernandez said
Kifano Jordan
had referred
him to Lazzaro
on a state
case (in the
elevator
afterward when
Inner City
Press asked
about this
case, the
answer was
that it has
been
dismissed); he
became aware
Lazzaro had
represented
Faheem Walter
when Lazzaro
made an
appearance for
Walter
sometime in
October or
November 2018.
He
said he
understood the
conflicts and
accepted them.
Judge
Engelmayer
said he
accepted it.
Lazzaro is
back. Minutes
later in the
sunshine
outside 500
Pearl Street
Lazzaro was
working his
phone on
another case.
And so it goes
in the SDNY.
The day before on
March 27 after a long trial
for a Bronx murder 22 years
ago in 1997, SDNY Judge Kevin
Castel read instructions for
the jury and told them, "And
with that, you may discuss the
case among yourself." After
the jury went into their room,
with marshal in the hall
outside, Judge Castel told the
seven lawyers they were all
welcome to come back and
appear before him. He said
only a grueling work load for
lawyers on trial keep the jury
trial system going, so the
jury service is tolerable in
terms of length. Then he added
his eight minute rule - that
they should not go back to
their offices (except maybe
the prosecutors, to St.
Andrew's Place), so they can
return to court on eight
minutes' notice in case the
jurors send a note out. The US
v. Latique Johnson trial Inner
City Press has been covering
or trying to cover across
Pearl Street in 40 Foley
Square, it remains unclear if
the exhibits will be put
online or notice given.
Earlier this week Inner City
Press dropped by and asked one
of the defense lawyers, the
one who waved a gun around
during summation, if there had
been jury notes. Yes, he said.
But what did they say? In the
Bronx cold case, two days
before on on March 25 a
government witness described
how his van was shot at on
Thanksgiving 1997 as he drove
away from a disco he found too
crowded. The defense quizzed
him if he had been selling
drugs on 26 March 1999 and 29
January 2000 and 2 February
2001 before being deported to
the Dominican Republic. "I
would just sell them when I
needed a couple of bucks," he
said. As to who killed his
brother, witness Ventura said,
"I know who did it." While
Inner City Press had to leave
to cover
the Michael Avenatti
presentment 12 stories higher
in the SDNY courthouse, a
person watching the entire
trial marveled to Inner City
Press that "the defendants
wife came, she works for
Immigration, how is that
possible." We'll have more on
this ongoing trial. Back on
March 21 a former NY police
officer now working in Florida
testified about stopping a
white van with a gun in it on
188th Street and the Grand
Concourse on 29 August 1991
and, along with Officer Serge
Denecko, arresting for men in
the van. Earlier a woman who
was shot at and grazed on the
chin described seeing a gun
sticking out the passenger's
side, and that Hinton, her ex
boyfriend, sold drugs on 149th
Street under the direction of
"Rob," presumably the
defendant Roberto Acosta a/k/a
Mojica. More and more facts
are coming in - maybe too
many? Back on March 20 a now
elderly man who had moved tens
of kilos of cocaine in 1998
was cross examined about how
much times he has met with the
prosecution to prepare this
testimony. It got repetitive,
as pointed out by U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York
Judge Kevin
Castel.
Did he meet Detective Vasquez
on January 26, 2018? He
couldn't remember the date but
yes, many times. Did Detective
Vasquez drive him around and
take photographs of the sights
and stash-houses he pointed
out (presumably including
156th and Broadway)? Yes.
Later on March 20 there were
two forms of testimony about
University Avenue in The
Bronx. There was the double
murder, on 22 December 1997,
Carlos Ventura and another. By
1999 there were payments into
the prison commissary account
of Jose Diaz a/k/a Cano, a
full $200 from Joyce Pettaway
who lived in Apartment 4-G of
2769 University Avenue from
September 1992 to November 5,
2001, according to a
stipulation by the landlord
Jonah Associated. There was a
long sidebar about an
objection to double hearsay;
there was a reference to two
cassette tapes of recorded
conversations between Robert
Acosta a/k/a Mojica and a
person whose name was
redacted, and a description of
how evidence is destroyed. Two
days before, the now-old man
testified about picking drugs
up in Jackson Heights, Queens
and Lodi, New Jersey and
cooking it into crack in an an
apartment on the
aforementioned (and
photographed) 156th Street and
Broadway in Manhattan. At
day's end under cross
examination he described in
detail buying a kilo of coke
for $40,000 and selling it for
$125 a gram - a mark up for
nearly 300%. The goal seemed
to be to get the jury to see
the witness as a predator, not
exactly difficult, despite how
he has aged.
He said he
would fly to Miami and buy the
cocaine from " a Colombia
gentleman" named Jose Picardo;
he described without objection
"un africano" named
Mike and two Dominican women
paid $10,000 each to flying
into Newark from the Dominican
with heroin strapped to their
bodies. The money to pay them
exchanged hands in a
restaurant on 155th Street and
Edgecombe Avenue, "on the way
to Yankee Stadium." Where the
old Polo Grounds used to be...
Earlier in the day there were
hearsay objections made to Judge Castel
which he took
to the
sidebar. The
courtroom was
relatively
full, but
apparently no
media other
than Inner
City Press.
The testimony
was specific:
the cocaine
was driving
from Texas to
the Lodi NJ
car mechanic
shop owned by
a man named
Wilmer. The
cocaine was
welded into
the floor of a
truck. Roberto
Acosta's cars
all had traps
for drugs,
money and
guns. The now
old man was
paid, not by
the week, but
by the job:
how much was
moved. He used
his apartment
in Yonkers and
the parking
place that
came with it.
Acosta
recruited him
in 1997, the
year of the
underlying
murder, in La
Estrella #2.
The old man
couldn't
remember what
kind of cell
phone Acosta
used in those
days, only
that it was
small. Back
on March 14 NYPD Detective
Ramirez described even older
friction ridge characteristics
of Robert Mojica going back to
1994 on Edgecombe Avenue in
Upper Manhattan. At day's end,
the lawyers fought about
whether the co-conspirator
exception to the hearsay rule
exists even if the conspiracy
at issue is not the one
charged in the indictment (the
government says yes). Judge
Castel told the lawyers to try
to re-acquaint themselves with
their families over the (three
day) weekend and he'll see
them Monday. And Inner City
Press as well. Earlier the
defense, on cross examination,
wondered why Ramirez was not
being asked about the 1997
crimes. Judge Castel declared
a break, during which he would
meet with students of a lawyer
who has appeared before him. A
tray of bagels was rolled in.
We'll have more on this trial.
Back on March 8, another
shooting in The Bronx in
October 2018 was the subject
of an ill-attended conference
in the SDNY.
Jerome Jackson
is described
as in a white
t-shirt with
silver handgun
on 2 October
2018 on
Freeman Street
- but in the
SDNY courtroom
of Judge Kevin
Castel he was
in jail house
blues and
shackles. His
lawyer Julia
Gatto
questioned
whether the
NYPD
detectives who
questioned
Jackson about
the shooting
were in fact
part of a
joint task
force with the
Feds - no,
Karin Potlock
for the
government
said, and on
that basis no
suppression -
and questioned
probable
cause. There
will be a
hearing on
that on April
Fools Day and
Inner City
Press aims to
be there. The
case is US
v. Jackson,
18 CR 760. A
week before on March 1 when
Statue of Liberty climber
Patricia Okoumou appeared in
the SDNY , it was to face
revocation of bail for more
recent climbs, all to protest
the separation of immigrant
families. SDNY Judge
Gorenstein did not revoke bail
but imposed house arrest. He
jibed that it appeared Ms.
Okoumou could only support
herself by donations garnered
by climbing. Afterward Inner
City Press asked her lawyer
Ron Kuby about this argument.
He said the judge has it
precisely wrong, or in
reverse: she raised money
because she is an activist,
she is not an actively in
order to make money. Ms.
Okoumou raised her fist, and
headed to Staten Island.
Photos here.
Inner City Press, which
interviewed Okoumou on
December 5 just after another
SDNY decision, in the Patrick
Ho / CEFC China Energy UN
bribery case, headed out and
streamed this
Periscope, and this Q&A,
with more to come, on this
case and others. How guns
eject shell casings was the
subject of expert testimony in
a Bronx gang trial on February
27 in the U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York.
Before Judge
Robert W.
Sweet, an ATF
agent traced a
bullet back to
Illinois;
under cross
examination he
said a shell
casing might
eject feet
rather than
yards unless
it bounced on
something.
Then testimony
went back to
2007, a
14-year old
with a gun
heading from
the Millbrook
projects to
the Mitchell
Houses. The
defense asked
for a mistrial
when the name
of a second
gang was
introduced;
the
prosecution
shot back (so
to speak) that
it came from
photos on the
defendant's
own Facebook
page. And so
it goes in
trials these
days. Back
on February 25 a prison
sentence of life plus five
years was imposed for a Bronx
murder by SDNY Chief Judge
Colleen McMahon on February
25. She presided over the
trial in which Stiven
Siri-Reynoso was convicted of,
among other things, murder in
aid of racketeering for the
death of Jessica White, a 28
year old mother of three, in
the Bronx in 2016. Jessica
White's mother was in the
court room; she was greeted by
Judge McMahon but declined to
speak before sentencing.
Siri-Reynoso was representing
himself by this point, with a
back-up counsel by his side.
Judge McMahon told him,
"You're a very smart man... a
tough guy, a calculating
person... You are a coward,
sent a child to do it for
you... Your emissary shot the
wrong person, a lovely lady...
It was a vicious, evil attack
against the good people of
that neighborhood." When she
imposed the life plus five
sentence, a woman on the
Jessica White side of the
courtroom cried out, yes
Ma'am, put the animal away!
Later, after Siri-Reynoso
ended asking how he can get
more documents about the case,
a woman on his side of the
courtroom said, "No te
preocupes, muchacho, Dios sabe
lo que hace" - don't worry,
God knows what he is doing.
But does He? Earlier on
February 25 when the
government tried to defend its
2018 change of policy or
practice on Special Immigrant
Juvenile status in the U.S.
District Court for the
Southern District of New York
Judge John G. Koeltl had many
questions about the change. He
asked, are you saying that all
the decisions before 2018 were
just wrong, under a policy in
place but not implemented at
the time? In the overflow
courtroom 15C the largely
young audience laughed, as the
government lawyer tried to say
it wasn't a change of policy
but rather an agency
interpretation of the statute.
Shouldn't there have been
notice and comment rulemaking
under the Administrative
Procedure Act? The government
said the argument proffered
for this was about the Freedom
of Information Act (on which,
as Inner City Press has noted,
the US Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency
has similarly reversed its
policy 180 degrees without
justification). SDNY Judge
Koeltl demanded t know if the
government is arguing that no
juvenile court in New York,
California (and maybe Texas
for other reasons he said) is
empowered to grant relief. The
answer was far from clear -
but where the ruling is going
does seem so. Watch this site.
The Bangladeshi Central Bank
which was hacked for $81
million in February 2016, on
January 31 sued in the US
District Court for the
Southern District of New York.
Now the first pre-trial
conference in the case has
been set, for 2 April 2019
before SDNY Judge Lorna G.
Schofield. Inner City Press
will be there.
In Dhaka, the
Criminal Investigation
Department which failed to
submit its probe report into
the heist on time has now been
ordered by Metropolitan
Magistrate
Sadbir Yasir
Ahsan
Chowdhury to
do so by March 13 in
Bangladesh Bank cyber heist
case.
In the U.S.
District Court for Central
California, the unsealed
criminal complaint against
Park Jin Hyuk lists four email
addresses involved in
spear-phishing Bangladesh Bank
and among others an unnamed
"African Bank;" one of these
addresses is said to also have
communicated with an
individual in Australia about
importing commodities to North
Korea in violations of UN
sanctions.
To the Federal
Reserve, Inner City Press has
requested records relating to
the Fed's role with response
due in 20 working days - watch
this site. In the SDNY, the
case is Bangladesh Bank v
Rizal Commercial Banking Corp
et al, U.S. District Court,
Southern District of New York,
No. 19-00983. On February 3 in
Dhaka Bangladesh Bank's
lawyer Ajmalul
Hossain
said it could take three years
to recover the money. The
Bank's deputy governor Abu
Hena Razee Hasan said those
being accused -- in the civil
not criminal suit -- include
three Chinese nationals.
Ajmalul Hossain said the Bank
is seeking its hacked million
plus interest and its expenses
in the case. He said US
Federal Reserve will extend
its full support and that
SWIFT, the international money
transfer network, also assured
of providing all the necessary
cooperation in recovering the
hacked money. The
Philippines returned $14.54
million in November 2016, so
$66.46 million has yet to be
retrieved. Now defendant RCBC
Bank of the Philippines has
hired the Quinn Emanuel law
firm to defend it, and it
already fighting back in
words. RCBC’s lead counsel on
the SDNY case, Tai-Heng Cheng,
said: “This is nothing
more than a thinly veiled PR
campaign disguised as a
lawsuit. Based on what we have
heard this suit is completely
baseless. If the Bank of
Bangladesh was serious about
recovering the money, they
would have pursued their
claims three years ago and not
wait until days before the
statute of limitations. Not
only are the allegations
false, they don’t have the
right to file here since none
of the defendants are in the
US." But it seems the funds
were transferred to and
through the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York. And as Inner
City Press reported in the US
v. Patrick Ho case last year,
the wiring of funds through
New York can confer
jurisdiction. Inner City Press
will be covering this case.
The first paragraph of the 103
page complaint reads, "This
litigation involves a massive,
multi-year conspiracy to carry
out one of the largest banks
heists in modern history right
here in New York City. On
February 4, 2016, thieves
reached into a bank account at
the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York (“New York Fed”) and
stole approximately $101
million (out of the nearly $1
billion they attempted to
steal). The bank account was
held for the benefit of
Bangladesh Bank, which is
Bangladesh’s Central Bank.
Bangladesh Bank has had a
45-year banking relationship
under which it has placed its
international reserves with
the New York Fed. The New York
Fed is a critical component of
the United States’ central
banking system and its link to
the international financial
system." Bangladesh's lawyers
on the case are "COZEN
O’CONNOR John J. Sullivan,
Esq. Jesse Loffler, Esq.
Yehudah Gordon, Esq." We'll
have more on this.
Debaprasad
Debnath, a general manager at
the central bank’s Financial
Intelligence Unit, Joint
Director Mohammad Abdur Rab
and Account and Budgeting
Department General Manager
Zakir Hossain all left Dhaka
to head to New York, for the
filing of the lawsuit, which
Inner City Press will be
following.
They say the
Federal Reserve Bank of New
York, which on January 29 was
instructed by the US State
Department to allow Juan
Guaido to access Venezuelan
accounts, will be helping its
Bangladeshi counterpart to get
to the bottom of the
hack. Those eyed include
Philippines’ Rizal Commercial
Banking Corporation or RCBC
and some of its officials, and
Philrem Service Corporation,
casino owners and
beneficiaries. Ajmalul Hossain
QC, a lawyer for the central
bank, is with them to file the
case.
It is an
interesting twist on the SDNY
as venue for the money
laundering and FCPA
prosecution of Patrick Ho of
CEFC for bribery in Chad and
to Uganda - in this case, too,
the money flowed through New
York. Inner City Press intends
to cover the case.
***
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