Frank Bright Gets 20 Years
After Saying He Was Misled Into SDNY Plea
For Killing Amaury Paulino
By Matthew
Russell Lee, @SDNYLIVE
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
August 21 -- On April 19 soon
after his prosecution for
murder resulted in a mistrial,
Defendant Frank Bright pleaded
guilty.
That day Bright
said: "On December 24, 2014,
near 129th Street in
Manhattan, I agreed with
another person to rob
oxycodone pills from two drug
dealers. During the robbery,
Mr. Paulino was shot and
killed. I knew my actions were
wrong and
illegal."
U.S. District
Court for the Southern
District of New York Judge
Katherine Polk Failla said,
"Ms. Noriega, may I have a
sentencing date?"
Ms. Noriega
replied, "Tuesday, August 20,
at 3:30 pm." Inner
City Press went to the
sentencing at that time.
In between,
Bright on June 17 told Judge
Failla, "I just felt like I
was misled into taking this
plea deal."
Then on July 19
Judge Failla toldBright's new
counsel John C. Meringolo
(whom Inner City Press
previously covered
when he represented John
Zancocchio in a Mafia /
racketeering trial before SDNY
Judge Alvin K.
Hellerstein) "Mr.
Meringolo, I appreciate you
coming in on what is somewhat
short notice. I received a
letter from your client dated
the 7th of July and it was, in
my reading, in conflict with
other statements that have
been made."
Meringolo
said, "We still want to move
forward with the plea
sentencing."
And so on August
20 Assistant US Attorney
Justin V. Rodriguez advocated
for the 240 months that his
Office had agreed to as the
cap; he told Judge Failla that
two of Amaury Paulino's
sisters wanted to make victim
impact statements.
Bright's
family members in the gallery
asked if they could make such
statement.
No, Judge Failla
said, the law does not provide
for that. But when she went
back into her robing room to
come up with the seemingly
pre-ordained sentence, one of
Bright's family members went
and expressed condolences to
Amaury Paulino's family
members. Another of Bright's
family members, however,
older, said loudly that one
day you'll see who really
killed your son. This was
quickly hushed
down.
Judge Failla
returned and said no grounds
for a variance below 240
months could be found; the 20
year sentence was imposed. It
will apparently be in Fort
Dix, with the RDAP program. Or
will the replacement of
counsel and the complaints
made, the at least two
pull-backs from the plea, give
rise to an appeal? Watch this
site. The case is US v. Bright,
18-cr-56 (KPF).
The previous day
on August 20 a jury returned
guilty verdicts on drugs and
gun charges on August 20
against Ernest Murphy, one of
15 defendants in a
Brooklyn-based narcotics
conspiracy case brought by the
U.S. Attorney for the Southern
District of New York.
It
came after some electronic and
laboratory evidence was
suppressed by Circuit Judge
Richard J. Sullivan, who
rather than re-assigning has
kept many of his criminal
cases in the SDNY.
Murphy's
two Criminal Justice Act
lawyers, Patrick Joyce and
Robert Moore, complained to
Judge Sullivan on the eve of
trial that they had only then
been given 16 gigabytes of
audio and video recordings and
lab tests on crack cocaine.
Rather
than delay the trial, Judge
Sullivan ordered much of it
suppressed. During the five
day trial the government still
had a number of NYPD lab
technicians testimony, and
played wiretaps of cell phone
calls and calls from Riker's
Island, whose location in The
Bronx was cited as a basis for
venue in the SDNY.
In the
intercepted calls, there was
discussion of cooking,
packaging and selling crack
cocaine. Several times
reference was made to bringing
firearms to protect turf. A
government slang expert
witness said that "Shaquille"
jersey meant .32 caliber
pistol.
After the
jury got the case, they asked
to examine the drugs. Judge
Sullivan declined to send the
crack and ecstacy pills into
the jury room. Instead the
juror came out and passed them
hand to hand, in evidence
bags, in the jury box.
On the
second day of deliberations
the jury through the Court
Security Officer passed a note
that they wanted all audio
recordings and transcripts.
Judge Sullivan sent them in a
thumb drive and three binders,
as well as a menu to order
lunch.
But barely
an hour later, the jury
returned with its guilty
verdicts. Judge Sullivan
polled them, sent December 6
as the sentencing date -
Murphy faces a minimum of 15
years in prison and perhaps
more - then joined the jurors
for their lunch. The case is US
v. Ernest Murphy,
18-cr-373 (Sullivan).
The US
Attorney's Office, which had
sent senior AUSA Michael D.
Maimin over to try to put out
the fire occasioned by the
late discovery, must have
breathed a sigh of relief.
Inner City Press will continue
to cover this case - and, we
hope, Judge Sullivan's
sentencing in another case he
kept, US v. Rodriguez
(05-cr-221), which the
government is asking, under
seal, to have sealed.
Watch this site.
Judge
Sullivan several times during
the trial pointedly noted that
it is an open courtroom, a
strength of our system, anyone
can just walk in -- except for
US
v. Rodriguez,
apparently, on which Inner
City Press will have more, as
well as on the differences
between the SDNY's and EDNY's
boiler plate plea agreement
letters. Watch this site - and
see
also @InnerCityPress
and the new @SDNYLIVE.
***
Your
support means a lot. As little as $5 a month
helps keep us going and grants you access to
exclusive bonus material on our Patreon
page. Click
here to become a patron.
Feedback:
Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
Box 20047, Dag Hammarskjold
Station NY NY 10017
Reporter's mobile (and weekends):
718-716-3540
Other, earlier Inner City Press are
listed here,
and some are available in the ProQuest
service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
Copyright 2006-2019 Inner City
Press, Inc. To request reprint or other
permission, e-contact Editorial [at]
innercitypress.com for
|