In
SDNY Judge Castel Urges Puello
To Avoid 2d Hand Pot Smoke and
Keep Chick-fil-A Job
By Matthew
Russell Lee
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
April 8 – Using court hearings
about violations of supervised
release are depressing,
sometimes ending with the
violator put back in shackles
and remanded. But on April 8
before U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern District of
New York Judge
Kevin Castel,
there was one out
of the norm.
Jonathan
Puello was
charged back to
2012, and on
April 8
initially the
talk was of
new state law
charges - some
dropped - and
of two drugs
tests failed
for
marijuana. But
his lawyer
attributed
this to second
hand smoke
and pointed
out the
cleanest of
urine since. Significantly,
Puello is set
to run a
Chic-fil-A
restaurant,
with an annual
salary of
$65,000, total
compensation
$77,000. Judge
Castel, who
recently
presided over
a double
murder cold
case that
Inner City Press covered
daily,
said this job
offer is good
news, and told
Puello to
arrange his
life
differently
that the way
that resulted
in second hand
smoke
charges. The
proceedings
was put back
on for after
another state
issue, on which
Puello's
lawyer
declined to
charge money
for advice, is
resolved. It's
what passes
for good news
in the SDNY.
Back on April
4 long time petty
criminal was brought shackled
into Federal court on
Thursday, after serving three
years in state penitentiary
for stealing appliances from a
department store. This was
deemed a violation of
supervised release, and the
Assistant US Attorney argued
for no bail. But Stanley
Bamber was born in Newark and
still has family in New
Jersey. He could live with his
brother, his assigned lawyer
argued, pending arguments
before SDNY Judge
Alison Nathan,
occupied the
same day with
Elon Musk. It
was finally agreed that
if Probation
approves and radio
frequency
electronic
monitoring is in
place, the 60
year old
Bambury may
see the light
of day. Between
1976 and 2000,
the prosecutor
said, Bamber
was charged
with crimes
35 times. His
was the last case of
the day; in
the elevator
Inner City
Press asked
the AUSA
about his
record and got
a Have a good
night. Okay
then - just
another day in
the SDNY. Johnny
Morgan is suing
the United States
for a rectal search he
endured
in the
Metropolitan
Correctional
Center at 150
Park Row,
right next to
the SDNY. On
April 4 before
SDNY Magistrate Judge Debra
Freeman, the government
presented an expert Roy
Lubit who said that
Morgan is a "malingerer"
and blamed
his pain on
abuse suffered
earlier at the
hand of
his own mother. But
even
government
expert Lubit
said that the
rectal entry
should not
have happened.
It is,
in fact, an outrage.
Inner City
Press was the
only media in
the smallish courtroom,
compared to
dozens of
reporters two
hours later
for Elon Musk.
While some
might question
taxpayer money
going to pay damages for
what happened
to Mr. Morgan,
what about
public money
for an expert
witness to
insult the
torturee?
We'll have
more on this.
The
Federal Defenders scored
a big win in a
misdemeanor proceeding
that only Inner City
Press attended
and covered on April
2. They
defeated the
U.S. Attorney's
Office
which argued
that the
simple assault
they agreed to
on a dispute
on a cruise
ship required
allocution to
actual
physical
conflict.
There was case law on
the Federal
Defenders'
side, and a
plea to making
a threat on
the cruise
ship - in
"international
waters" -- was
found
sufficient.
The case was United
States v.
Batista, 18
Cr. 730 (NRB). The
Federal
Defenders
lawyer was
Sabrina P.
Shroff, whom
Inner City
Press has
previously
covered in the
UN bribery
cases of
Patrick Ho
(new Hong
Kong documentary
here),
getting
bail for Cheikh Gadio, and
of Ng Lap
Seng,
representing
hapless Jeff Yin. The
issue in
Batista was whether
simple assault
requires the
defendant to
"strike or
choke." Ms.
Shroff cited
the US v
Denis and US v
Chestaro
cases, and the
matter was
quickly
disposed by
Judge Naomi
Reice Buchwald in her
relatively
small
courtroom on
the 21st floor
of 500 Pearl
Street. The question
is why the
U.S.
Attorney's Office
in this case
had not
researched basic
case law - and
whether the
defendant
Carlos Batista, Junior,
from the Dominican
Republic, must
now be deported.
We hope to
have more on
this.
Earlier
on April 2, in 40 Foley: "I
was a street drug dealer in
from of my building in
the Bronx," a defendant
told U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern District of
New York Judge
Paul A.
Engelmayer on
April 2.
Defendant Gonzalez
was pleading
guilty to a
lesser
included
charge, with a
guideline
sentence
of between 120
and 150 months
in jail. But
he won't be
sentenced
until July 11 at 2:30
pm, after the
Probation
Department
does its
interview and
issues a Pre
Sentencing
Report that
will remain
sealed until,
somehow,
Gonzalez
appeals. We'll
have more on
this - there
were no family
members in the
courtroom,
no media other
than Inner
City Press. Back on
March 28
an
insider
trading action
by the SEC was
under heavy
fire in SDNY
courtroom of
Judge Richard
M. Berman.
The SEC had in
2017 grand
alleged that
"Ariel Darvasi
and Amir
Waldman were
in possession
of material
nonpublic
information
about the
impending
acquisition
when they
purchased
Mobileye
securities"
just prior to
its
acquisition by
Intel.
But on March 28 the defendants'
lawyers,
moving for
summary
judgment,
mocked the
arguments. They
said Waldman
was "not a
direct insider;"
they said
suspicious
trades are
not enough,
mere contact
with an
insider is not
enough. The
SEC lawyer responded
with tales of
MobileEye's
founders
private jet
flight to New
York to nail
down the Intel
deal. Much of
the argument
came down to
whether a
response by
Waldman during
deposition,
that he had
been aware of
the trip -
"yes" - before
the words, for
the merger,
were said,
should go to a
jury.
The defendants
insisted on their video.
There was no
other media in the
court room
but Inner City
Press, still
without
its
electronics. So
what of
general deterrence?
What of
transparency?
In the SDNY
there is no
comprehensive
calendar,
and for now
the Press that
seeks to
report on as
much as
possible is still
restrained. We'll
have more on this.
***
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