Merlin Dilone Gets Sentencing
Postponed Along With Bronx Victim Statement
For SDNY Fatico Hearing
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Periscope,
Photos
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
July 1 – Merlin Dilone,
charged in the death of Eddy
Guzman in The Bronx on May 9,
2016, was to have been
sentenced on July 1 by U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District Judge
Vernon
Broderick. His
courtroom had
not only the
lawyers and
U.S. Marshals
but two dozen
attendees. But
it got
postponed.
Judge
Broderick will
hold a
so-called
Fatico
hearing. He
offered to
hear victim
impact
statements
about the
death of Eddy
Guzman but,
after
conferring,
Assistant U.S.
Attorney Frank
Balsamello who
also handled
the recent
trial of James
Felton of
nearby Monroe
Avenue said
the victims
would wait.
Dilone's
lawyer Kristen
Santillo said
she wanted to
confer with
her shackled
client but
that the
atmosphere - a
courtroom with
people ready
to deliver
victim impact
statements -
was not
conducive to
it. It was
left unclear
if the Fatico
hearing and
the sentencing
will occur on
the same day.
Inner City
Press will
have more on
this. The case
is US v
Dilone,
17-cr-707
(Broderick).
Back in June in
the SDNY 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 on June 19 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, SDNY
Judge William
H. 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. Now he is
cooperating.
The
government said they may have
another cooperating witness on
Monday, and may close their
case then or on Tuesday. The
defense may recall witness
Ezekiel Burley for some
questions then put on a "short
case" "probably" not including
James Felton taking the stand.
Judge
Pauley said he will send them
a draft jury charge later on
June 14, and asked the
government to submit a
proposed jury form. Judge
Pauley does not send the
exhibits into the jury room
but only a list, from which
the jurors can make requests.
Just
before the jury was released
for the weekend there was a
sidebar and instruction. As
the government asked Andre
Felton about his offer to help
get James Felton a lawyer, the
defense asked to speak drowned
out by white noise. Afterward
Judge Pauley told the jury
that James Felton's lawyers
are court appointed and are
paid by the United States. If
there was any doubt.
On June 13
another cooperating witness,
Gonzalez, was cross examined
about his question for a 5K
letter from the prosecution
and how far he would go to get
out from under the otherwise
applicable 45 year minimum
sentence. Gonzalez sold crack
in the area; when his
testimony was over he was led
back into the cell block by
two US Marshals.
The jury
filed out and those in the
gallery including Inner City
Press, some neighborhood
resident including one with a
small child and some from the
prosecutor's office were told
to wait in the courtroom until
they all went down on the
elevator.
In the
lull Felton's lawyers argued
for the admissibility for
jailhouse recorded calls
showing that Felton had gotten
a construction job. Judge
Pauley said he
would think
about it
overnight, but
that it seemed
clear Felton
knew he was
being
recorded,
impacting
reliability.
Felton's
lawyer said
those on the
call talked
about
"everything."
Judge Pauley
noted that
they also sold
drugs under
the eye of
multiple pole
cameras. The
trial will
continue on
Friday from
9:30 am to
1:30 pm then
break for the
weekend. Inner
City Press has
requested
exhibits.
Watch this
site.
Earlier on June
13 the prosecution put on the
witness stand a video expert
who has enhanced and audio
synched the videos, with the
gunshots audible. A man
already dying on the sidewalk
was shot, again, and spasmed.
The jury leaned forward. Next
up was a witness from T-Mobile
law enforcement relations,
about responding to a warrant.
It is not
only emails and text messages
that trip up today's
defendants, as in the USA
v. Ahuja and Shor
trial across Pearl Street. Now
there are so many surveillance
cameras that shootings like
this are captured from
multiple angles, and can be
enhanced. The jury can
identify with those on the
sidewalk running for cover.
Overnight
the prosecution wrote to Judge
Pauley to
suggest a jury
instruction
that "the
death penalty
is not a
potential
punishment for
the defendant
in this case."
It's come to
that.
Back
on June 12
there was the
testimony by
Ezekiel
Burley, hoping
for a 5K
letter for
cooperating,
turned to the
shooting of
Benny White
and another in
December 2016
in the same
neighborhood.
The dispute
about about
who was
robbing the
drug sales
workers.
A
girlfriend was
left to "clean
up" the
apartment of
drugs and
baggies and a
gun, which
Burley said he
"threw in a
lake by my
house."
Burley in
early 2017 got
shot himself
in a
barbershop on
175th and
Morris Avenue.
He was
interviewed by
police while
on morphine,
he told the
jury. He told
only what he
thought they
had on video.
Later he
proffered by
only
partially.
Finally he
told the
prosecutors he
gave the gun
to Felton in
June 2016. Now
his faces life
in prison - or
as he said
under the "new
law," only 70
years. But he
could get less
for
cooperation.
What will the
jury think?
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
trial, even
without
exhibits. See
@InnerCityPress
and the new @SDNYLIVE.
***
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