In SDNY Accused Manhattan
Arsonist Deese Given Deferred Prosecution Deal
in Murky Mag Court
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Exclusive; Video, pics
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
June 17 – Jamal Deese "ignited
a fire in a restaurant located
at 616 8th Avenue in
Manhattan" on 5 August 2018,
U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman
alleged on four days after the
fire.
On June 17
Berman's Assistant US
Attorney's appeared before a
distracted SDNY Judge Berman
with a deferred prosecution
deal of the kind that HSBC
Bank got for laundering money
for drug cartels. Judge Berman
after a lengthy proceeding
urging an SDNY cooperating
witness to use the $16,000
given to him to move to
Philadelphia referred the
matter to the week's
Magistrate Judge - who signed
off in an illegible signature
with no other publicly
available cases for the day.
See @InnerCityPress and the
new @SDNYLive.
The case is, or was,
19-cr-22...
Also on June 17,
a sentencing of a defendant
seeking time served, seemingly
for cooperation with the
government, was abruptly
declared "sealed" by U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York Judge
Lorna G.
Schofield on
June 17.
She
said she was
going to seal
the
transcript,
but that once
this reporter
walked into
her open
courtroom 1106
in 40 Foley
Square, she
moved the
entire
proceeding
into her
robing room,
closed to the
Press and
public.
When
she and the
shackled
defendant,
Assistant US
Attorneys and
US Marshals
emerged twenty
minutes later,
Judge
Schofield said
only, "We're
adjourned."
There was no
disclosure of
the outcome of
the proceeding
- as Inner
City Press
walked in, the
defendant's
lawyer was
asking for
time served."
Then
Judge
Schofield said
she wanted to
"shake hands
with our
visitors" and
proceeded to
do just that
with the two
other people
in the
gallery. Inner
City Press
left.
No one where
on the
electronic
board in the
SDNY lobby at
500 Pearl
Street was any
proceeding
before Judge
Schofield at
that time
list. Nor in
the day's
PACER
calendar.
So it is both
a confidential
sentencing,
and a
confidential
case?
Judge
Schofield's
Rules for
Criminal
Cases,
ironically,
provide that
there is a
presumption
that all
sentencing
submissions
are public,
and that if
anything is
redacted only
those pages
with
redactions can
be withheld
from the
public docket.
But no such
distinction is
possible when
an entire
proceeding is
moved into the
judge's robing
room barred to
the press and
public, with
no notice or
opportunity to
be heard.
Inner City
Press will
have more on
this - see
also @InnerCityPress
and the new @SDNYLIVE.
Before Judge Schofield: Steven
M. Calk of FDIC-regulated
Federal Savings Bank was
presented and arraigned on May
23 for financial institution
bribery for corruptly using
his position with FSB to issue
$16 million in high-risk loans
to Paul Manafort in a bid to
obtain a senior position with
the Trump administration,
namely Undersecretary of the
Army.
Back on
May 23 Magistrate Judge Debra
Freeman accepted the
government's proposal of $5
million bond with no co-signer
(although that is usually
required for moral suasion)
and travel allowed throughout
the United States (though more
defendants are usually
confined to the Soutern and
Eastern District of NY and one
other district). Money talks.
Afterward
in front of the SDNY
courthouse Inner City Press
asked Calk's lawyers Daniel
Stein and Jeremy Margoles
about Manafort saying he had
misstated his financial
situation to get the FSB
loans. When did Calk know?
They did not answer. Video here,
Facebook video here.
Inner City Press' Alamy photos
here.
Now in May
28 letter to District Judge
Lorna G. Schofield, the
government has requested the
motions directed of their
indictment of Calk be filed by
July 12. Judge Schofield
granted it only in part,
saying that by June 21 Calk
"shall file a pre-motion
letter with a briefing
description of any motion(s)
he intends to file." While the
OCC has yet to sufficiently
answer, and is trying to
hinder Inner City Press'
reporting, we will stay on
this case.
On May 23,
still from the SDNY courthouse
covering other cases including
one involving the death
penalty, Inner City
Press reported
finding no U.S. Home Mortgage
Disclosure Act data for
"Federal Savings Bank." But
there's more.
The Federal
Savings Bank's website,
while providing a generic link
to the FDIC, and a statement
"Member FDIC," has no link for
the U.S. Community
Reinvestment Act. (Nor does it
mention the indictment of
Stephen Calk, simply listing
his brother John Calk now as
CEO and Vice Chairman. Who is
the chairman?)
It lists a
loan production office on
Avenue J in Brooklyn, and two
deposit taking braches in
Illinois. Did it see some
exemption from the CRA and
other consumer protection
laws? From fair lending laws?
Earlier on
the morning of May 24 Inner
City Press asked the FDIC,
"Having covered yesterday's
arraignment of the Chairman of
The Federal Savings Bank in
the SDNY courthouse, including
the FDIC's involvement, I
checked the bank's website and
found "Member FDIC" but no
mention of the Community
Reinvestment Act."
The FDIC's
spokesperson David Barr, to
his credit, responded quickly,
writing to Inner City Press:
"The Federal Savings Bank,
Chicago, is regulated by the
Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency. They would be
responsible for CRA and
regulatory oversight. You
should contact the OCC for
more information."
Now the
OCC under Comptroller Joseph
Otting has done everything
possible to block the release
of information, denying FOIA
fees waivers and expedited
treatment, refusing comments.
But for now online the OCC has
said this about The Federal
Savings Bank: "While TFSB
originated a substantial
majority of its loans outside
of its AAs; the bank’s
business strategy is to
operate as a mortgage banking
entity with a nationwide
presence and market place.
Taking the bank’s business
strategy into consideration
the bank’s performance under
this lending criterion is
deemed reasonable."
Reasonable? Bribery, too,
seems to have been part of its
business strategy, right under
the nose of the OCC of Otting.
Before 2
pm on May 24 Inner City Press
in writing asked Otting's OCC:
"This is a Press question for
the OCC, from Inner City
Press... Please confirm that
The Federal Savings Bank is
subject to HMDA, and/or if it
is below a threshold, as I can
find no data in its name on
FFIEC.gov. Also, please today
provide as an OCC response to
the Press this OCC-regulated
bank's CRA public file and
other information in the OCC's
possession concerning the
bank's CRA and fair lending
performance. Is it
normal for a bank not to
mention these things on its
website, nor to provide any
link to its actual regulator,
the OCC, but only to the
FDIC?
Please explain what steps the
OCC is taking beyond Stephen
Calk no longer being the CEO.
What about his brother?"
More than
three hours later, even to the
questions at the end, the OCC
had only provided this:
"We are reviewing your
questions, but we may not be
able to respond by your
deadline.
Regards,
Stephanie
Stephanie Collins
Manager, Media Relations
Public Affairs
Operations Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency."
This is the same OCC which has
delayed FOR MONTHS providing
basic information about a
merger it has now already
rubber stamped.
On the
morning of May 28 Inner City
Press received from the OCC a
statement that The Federal
Savings Banks is subject to
HMDA - how they are listed in
the HMDA database remains a
question - and this:
"Question: Is it normal
for a bank not to mention
these things [CRA and HMDA] on
its website, nor to provide
any link to its actual
regulator, the OCC, but only
to the FDIC? [OCC
answer:] This question is best
directed to the bank."
So wait:
Otting's OCC leaves it
entirely up to the banks it
ostensibly regulates whether
to mention on their website
and presumably branches CRA,
HMDA or even the OCC where
consumers could complain?
We'll have more on this.
Stephen
Calk was quoted,
at least in 2012, opposing
regulation: "As Mr. Stephen
Calk writes in the September
7, 2012 edition of Origination
News: “Basel III is designed
to level the playing field
among major banking
institutions that operate
internationally. Force-feeding
these same rules to community
banks in the United States is
unnecessary and in fact
counter-productive,
particularly in the current
economic environment.” Basel
III is one thing. But no
Community Reinvestment Act?
The Federal
Savings Bank lists locations -
and bankers - in
Arizona - Scottsdale
California - Irvine Colorado -
Fort Collins Delaware -
Selbyville Florida - Sarasota
Illinois - Chicago Illinois -
Lake Forest Illinois - Oak
Brook Illinois - Park Ridge
Indiana - Bloomington Indiana
- Indianapolis Kansas -
Overland Park Louisiana -
Laplace Maryland - Annapolis
Maryland - Timonium CD
Massachusetts - Lawrence New
Jersey - Hackensack New Jersey
- Lakewood New York - Brooklyn
New York - Melville New York -
New York New York - Queens
North Carolina - Raleigh Ohio
- Columbus Rhode Island -
South Kingstown Tennessee -
Nashville Virginia -
Alexandria Virginia -
Fredericksburg Virginia -
Newport News Virginia -
Richmond Virginia - Vienna
Virginia - Warrenton...
We'll have more on this.
In the
indictment press release, FDIC
OIG Special Agent-in-Charge
Patricia Tarasca said,
“Today’s indictment charges
Stephen Calk with misusing his
position as Chairman and CEO
of a bank for his own personal
gain. The FDIC Office of
Inspector General remains
committed to investigating
cases where bank officials
cause multimillion-dollar
losses to a financial
institution and undermine its
integrity.” (The FDIC stands
to be the lead regulator of
BB&T whose money
laundering enforcement action
was just terminated by the
Federal Reserve to facilitate
merger with Suntrust, click here
for that and Inner City Press'
FOIA request and appeal.)
The
indictment was unsealed the
day after President Donald J.
Trump lost his bid to stay the
House of Representatives'
subpoenas to two other banks,
Capital One and Deutsche Bank.
After the May 22 ruling in Trump
v. Deutsche Bank by SDNY
Judge Edgardo Ramos, Trump
lawyer Patrick Strawbridge
headed to the elevators in the
windowless lobby outside the
courtroom.
He was
disinclined to comment and
even take questions from the
press. When reporters got on
the elevator with him, he got
off, saying sacrastically but
not bitterly, Much as I'd like
to be asked questions in the
elevator...
Downstairs in front of the
Thurgood Marshall courthouse
there were demonstrators will
a long Impeach Trump banner
and the small black Congress
Has A Right To Know signs,
three of which had been
quickly raised in the
courtroom, and just as quickly
taken down when Judge Ramos
requested it.
The SDNY
Court Security Officers spoke
to the sign holders but did
not eject them, during the 10
minute recess Judge Ramos took
to put the finishing touches
on his 25-page decision.
TV
crews from CNN and Univision
were set up across the street,
and a gaggle of photographers
set up on the sidewalk to wait
for Strawbridge and the House
of Representatives' lawyer
Douglas Letter. As time
passed others passing the
courthouse, and coming out of
it, stopped to ask as so often
happens, Who are you waiting
for?
While few had heard of
Strawbridge and the House
lawyer named Letter, the
mention of Trump drew a range
of reactions. The sight of
long lens cameras -- Inner
City Press had this day
retrieved it, from the
seemingly overflow Press Room
in the basement of 40 Foley
Square -- attracted others
with cases in the SDNY.
Accompanied by a trio of
children in wheelchairs on a
day when the disabled entrance
on Pearl Street to the
Thurgood Marshall courthouse
was closed were lawyers in Abrams
et al v. Carranza,
one in a series of Federal
lawsuits against campaigning
NYC Mayor Bill De Blasio's
Education Chancellor RIchard
Carranza. They had a flier and
expressed hope that SDNY Judge
Alison Nathan would, as
indicted, issue a ruling in
their case within the week.
Other
litigatants were less media
savvy or directed. Those in a
criminal trial before Judge
Vernon Broderick admitted the
case made it hard for even
them to stay awake -- Inner
City Press has tried several
times -- but noted that the
U.S. Attorney's office
promotes the prosecution each
morning in an e-mail.
The
plaintiff side in an
employment discrimination
trial in front of Judge
Valerie Caproni came out (the
defense may have been less
willing to approach the
press), then Judge Broderick
himself, down to earth as
ever. It was growing late.
To put its
camera back in the 40 Foley
press room, Inner City Press
climbed the stairs only to be
told, We close at five.
Explaining that there is a
Press Room next to the
cafeteria and that the Trump
case had done later was at
first to no avail. Finally a
supervisor was called who did
not acknowledge any right to
enter, but said he would allow
it this one time. We may have
more on this: even in the
small strokes, press access
rights are important,
particularly in a courthouse.
Earlier, before
issuing his ruling Judge
Edgardo
Ramos had
asked the
lawyers for
the two banks
that got the
subpoenas,
Deutsche
Bank and Capital One, if
they wanted to
speak. They
did not. This
even as House
counsel Strawbridge
detailed
Deutsche
Bank's long
history with
money
laundering
(and theft
during the
Holocaust,
which didn't
come up).
Capital One is
a rough,
too, on
predatory auto
lending and
the Community
Reinvestment
Act. But the
banks lay low.
Now
under Judge
Ramos' 25-page
ruling, the
banks become
required to
respond to the
subpoenas
in seven days,
on May 29. That's
the time
during which
the House has
agreed
not to enforce
the subpoena,
and the time
during which
Trump's
lawyers seem certain to
file an appeal
and ask again
for a stay
from the Second Circuit
Count of Appeals higher
up, in both
senses, in 40
Foley Square.
Earlier still in
the May in the SDNY,
Congressman Christopher
Collins (R-NY) waived his
right to be present for a May
3 hearing in the criminal
insider trading case against
him held past 5 pm in the SDNY
courtroom of
Judge Broderick.
On May 10, Judge
Broderick
started on
l'affaire
Collins at 2
pm, after a
case against
BuzzFeed
(Inner City
Press coverage
here).
Early in
the
proceeding,
before two
shackled inmates
were led in leading
to a brief
suspension of
the white
shoe SEC
Congressman
matter, Broderick
made a joke
about Donald
Trump and
evasive legal
moves. I'm not
going there, said
one of the
participants in
Collins, who was an
early endorser
of Trump.
Broderick
said, "I
should have either
- but it is
what it is."
Three hours
later, during
which Inner
City Press in
full
disclosure
went one story
down in the courthouse
to cover
a Fatico
hearing about
threats in the
MCC, Judge
Broderick
was setting
the time for
Collins'
lawyers to
make motions.
He arrived
on four weeks
after he rules
on discovery, with
the SEC to
provide
whatever he
directs to the
defense one
week after the
ruling. I'm
not saying
you're going
to get anything, Judge
Broderick
said. Collins'
lead lawyer
said he is a
optimist. More on
Patreon;
watch this
site.
Collins' team
of lawyers
have made a
slew of
suggestions to
Judge
Broderick on
what discovery
to seek from
the U.S.
Attorney's
office, from
communications
with the SEC
to information
about real
estate,
Cameron
Collins and
Lauren Zarsky
and their
sales of
Immunotherapeutics
stock after
MIS416, aimed
at secondary
multiple
sclerosis,
failed the
Drug Trial and
Rep Collins
made his calls
from the White
House
Congressional
picnic.
On May 3 Judge
Broderick was
urging wide
disclosure by
the
government,
whether
characterized
as 3500
material or
under Brady or
Giglio. The
notes to be
produced, he
said, didn't
have to been
entirely
contemporaneous.
He
had a series of
questions for
the U.S.
Attorney which
he did not get
through as it
approached 6
p.m. and his
courtroom deputy
had gone for the
day.
Collins' lead
lawyer from
BakerHostetler,
Jonathan R.
Barr, directed
Broderick to a
decision by
SDNY Judge Jed
Rakoff during
the Gumpta
case, and
Broderick said
that he would
read it. He
confessed he
had himself
looked up
applicable
cases on
Westlaw,
adding that he
might have
missed some
cases.
This case
is USA
v. Collins, et
al.,
18-cr-00567
(VSB). More on
Patreon,
here.
Judge
Broderick told
Collins'
lawyers to
expect to come
back in a
week's time on
Friday, May
10. One of
them said he
would only be
returning to
the United
States that
morning;
another said
that he then
would be
leaving for
the same place
his colleague
had been:
Argentina.
Thus
is big money,
and big
politics, law
done in the
SDNY.
***
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
|