SDNY
Judge Rakoff Applies FIRST
STEP Act To Release Jamar
Miller After Courses In Brick
Wall and Medicine Ball
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Periscope
video, II
III
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
July 31 – A defendant who has
already served eight years in
prison, most recently in
Kentucky, has been ordered
released in 10 days under the
FIRST STEP Act, by U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York Judge
Jed Rakoff.
In
a re-sentencing
or
reconsideration
under 18 USC 3553(a) held
on July 31
with Inner
City Press the
only media in
the courtroom,
Judge Rakoff
gave the
Bureau of
Prison ten
days to take
all administrative
steps to
release Jamar
Miller. Gerald
J. Di Chiara,
whom Judge
Rakoff
appointed to represent
Miller for
this FIRST
STEP Act motion on
June 15, asked
if Miller
could be
released right
away. Judge
Rakoff replied
that in his
long
experience,
giving the
time for BoP
to do it right
makes sense.
Di Chiara's
motion cites Judge
Rakoff's own
decision
in US v.
Nelson
Martinez,
4-cr-48, five
days
before Judge
Rakoff
appointed De
Chiara. In
that decision no "de novo"
resentencing
was
undertaken,
but rather a
reconsideration
of the factors
under 18 USC
3553(a).
Here,
Miller showed
that he got
his GED.
The exhibits in the
docket on PACER
show courses
in Medicine
Ball,
Spinning,
Brick Walls
and Victim
Impact. Now
he'll be out
in ten days. The
case is US
v. Jamar
Miller,
10-cr-94.
Inner City
Press will
continue to
cover this
and other
cases, in the
courtrooms
then
perched
over the 500
Pearl Street
PACER terminal
as it has
worked for
months. Watch
this site.
Back on July 24
before Judge Rakoff a three
defendant passport fraud
scheme that Inner City Press
began covering in February reached
a philosophical
conclusion when
Malamin Jagana
was given a sentence
of three years
in prison by
Judge Rakoff.
His two years
of supervised
release will
not have the
"search"
condition so
routinely
imposed. Judge
Rakoff said it
might be unconstitutional, as
he also said
the sentencing
guidelines are
irrational.
The government
has argued
that passport
fraud
like Jagana's
poses a
"significant"
risk to
national
security.
Judge Rakoff inquired
into this, and
Assistant
US Attorney Emily A.
Johnson agreed
that the word
"significant"
should be dropped.
AUSA
Johnson's
sentencing
submission of
July 22,
just two days
before the
sentencing,
noted that "the
defendant has
not filed a
sentencing
submission as
of the
Government's
filing of
this letter." Then
defense lawyer
Peter E.
Brill's
submission came in,
arguing among other
things that
"Mr. Jagana is a
hustler."
Judge Rakoff
countered that
Brill was presenting
his
client as not
caring about
the line
between lawful
and unlawful.
After that,
Jagana declined
to speak as
was his right but
not duty. He
got three
years. Call it
the leadership
or hustler
multiplier.
On May
23 Aboubarcari
Wague was
accompanied by
at least 48
supporters in
asking for
sentencing to
a halfway
house, not
jail.
Judge Rakoff
retired to his
chambers to
see what he
could do. The
courtroom
remained
almost silent,
with five
people in most
bench rows and
up to eight
people in one.
Judge Rakoff
emerged with
said he'd
learned that
the technical
term for
halfway house
is
"residential
re-entry
center." He
agreed to
Wague's
request for a
halfway house
three days a
week, until
180 days are
served. He
said this
might lead to
more rather
than less
general
deterrence,
since
community
members would
see Wague
checking
himself back
in, for more
than a year.
Like his
co-defendants
Malamin Jagana
whom Inner
City Press
covered and
Mahamadou
Jabbi, Wague
is from The
Gambia. His
sentencing
submission
recounts him
returning to
Banjul for
high school,
then New York
requiring him
to re-do the
year. He drove
a cab to
support
relatives.
On the other
hand he urged
a woman he had
dated, Binta
Touray, to lie
and tell law
enforcement
officials that
she did not
know him.
Judge Rakoff
referred to
false grand
jury
testimony,
before
agreeing to
the halfway
house. At the
end Wague's
supporters,
seemingly
largely from
the Harlem
Community
Islamic
Center, filed
out quietly as
Judge Rakoff
turned to more
mundane
matters in
Spina v.
Cartegena,
with only the
lawyers
present. This
is @SDNYLIVE.
Background: Back
on February 28 before his now
begun trial for US passport
fraud, Malamin Jagana asked
U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York
Judge Jed Rakoff to modify his
bail to allow a trip to
Gambia. His reason was
humanitarian: to attend a
ceremony with his wife who
lives there for their baby who
died in a miscarriage a year
ago. As reported
that day by Inner City Press,
the only media present for the
proceeding, his lawyer called
the ceremony and the father's
attendance a cultural
requirement. The government
opposed Jagana's trip,
referring not to Gambia but to
Africa as if it were a county:
"He has connection to
Africa... His wife lives in
Africa." SDNY Judge Rakoff did
not go "Africa Is A Country"
but on risk of flight agreed,
saying while "sympathetic to
this tragic event... I don't
think the risk of him not
returning is anything other
than huge. So the application
is denied." On April 1, again
with Inner City Press the only
media in the courtroom as the
trial in fact begun, Agent
Nieves was questioned in
several rounds about Jagana's
passport moves through his and
his brother's apartment at 31
Mount Hope Place in The Bronx,
the claim of passport loss on
a train in Europe as well as
after soccer practice or
"training" by Yankee Stadium,
and a bag full of Gambian
passports and certificates of
good behavior. We'll have more
on this. Earlier in February
in the SDNY a Ugandan man who
flown to the US with hands
bound accused of renting his
Entebbe property for a meth
lab was sentenced in the SDNY
to six years in prison. Before
Judge Kevin Castel passed
sentence, he heard the lawyer
for Ismael Balinda argue that
the chicken coop on the
Entebbe property was not an
"enclosure" for purposes of
the statute, and emphasize
that Balinda was in Nairobi
with his wife, in the SDNY
courthouse on February 12
along with Inner City Press
and no other media, and only
ran into his co-conspirators
by chance. If so it was bad
luck indeed. In a Declaration
sworn to on 29 January 2018
Balinda stated that in Nairobi
the car he was in was stopped
and he was put in another car,
then "I asked who they were,
and one of the men told the
other in Swahili that I
was asking who they are,
at which point, the man
talking to the cab driver
walked over to us, put a gun
to my head and said he would
“blow my head” if I asked
again...I was driven to the
Special Branch in the center
of Nairobi and told that I
was under arrest because
I was with the “wrong
people'... We were then told
that we were under arrest by
the US government and that
we had to do whatever
was asked of us or we would be
in trouble. 32. We were
processed one at a time, put
on the plane and our hands
were zip-tied. 33. We were
told not to speak to each
other and after about eleven
hours (during which I
slept briefly), they started
questioning us, starting with
me." And now, a six year jail
term... Earlier in the week a
Bronx mother of two was
sentenced to 90 months in
Federal prison on February 11
in the U.S. District Court for
the Southern District after
arguing that the cold and lack
of visitors in lock-up pending
sentencing militated for a
lesser sentence. SDNY Judge
Valerie Caproni said that
conditions in the MCC where
the defendant Marilyn Vargas
had been were better than in
the MDC in Brooklyn which had
been left without heat, see
below. Marilyn Vargas said
guards told her she was "the
property of the BOP," the
Bureau of Prisons, and that no
visits were allowed during the
government shutdown. Judge
Caproni said that the shutdown
was not that long, a month or
six weeks. She questioned
where Vargas had been working
between 2000 and 2014, and why
she had been driving a Lexus
when caught "red handed" with
twenty kilograms of cocaine.
Vargas' lawyer replied that it
was a used Lexus, in someone
else's name. It was to no
avail. Judge Caproni said
Vargas seemed most sorry that
she was caught, inferring from
letters of support saying that
Vargas has made a one-time
mistake that Vargas had no
come clean to her friends
about the extend of her
involvement in the drug trade.
Vargas' two daughters, 30 and
19, were in the Thurgood
Marshall courthouse
proceeding. Vargas spoke
before sentencing, near tears,
citing her mother in Puerto
Rico and desire to scare
straight other single mothers
in her Christian communities
in The Bronx. While
agreeing to
recommend FCI
Danbury, Judge
Caproni
went to the higher end of the
sentencing guidelines,
choosing 90 months from the
range of 78 to 97 months.
Marilyn Vargas was led out of
the courtroom, her feet
shackled. Inner City Press and
the other attendees - no other
journalists - were told to
wait until Vargas was taken
away on the elevator,
seemingly with shackles
re-applied to her
wrists. It stood in
contrast to lighter sentences
on corporate defendants, and
impunity for diplomats and the
UN as a whole. We'll have more
on this. Back on February 5
when Judge Analisa Torres
returned at 7:30 pm from the
Brooklyn MDC to her courtroom
in the U.S. District Court for
the Southern District of New
York, those assembled - six
journalists, Federal
Defenders, two named
plaintiffs in tan prison
guards - seemed to agree that
something would happen,
perhaps a ruling for a special
master to oversee the MDC.
Judge
Torres asked both Federal
Defenders' Dierdre
Dionysia von
Dornum and the
FBI's John Ross to
describe that
they'd
seen on the
visit to the
MDC with her,
which Latitia
James also
accompanied
(though no
journalists,
despite
requests in
written and orally in
the court). Ms
von Dornum
said the
lights were on and
it was
warmer, but still
no medical
treatment and
few lawyers'
visits. The
expectation of
a ruling for a
special master grew.
But when Judge
Torres issued
her ruling,
it concerned
the failure of
the two
inmates to
take the
standard and
provide even
"a shred of
evidence"
of their
claims, that one would face
retaliation
and the other
needed a
transfer on
medical
groups. When it was
offered that
the
testify now, past 8
pm, Judge Torres
denied it,
saying it was
too late. An
affidavit
will be
provided later
but the moment
was lost. The
request for
a special
master, Judge Torres
said, had been
raised, and
more
appropriately,
in the civil
litigation
in the Eastern
District of
New York -
where, Inner
City Press learned from
a case
participant
who said "off
the record" a
meeting of all
judges and the
US Attorney
took place,
trying to
solve "the whole
situation."
There was
criticism of
Nicole McFarland,
of the
continuing
denial of medical
treatment and
timely
lawyers' visits.
But none of
these were
addressed much
less solved on
Tuesday
night. Inner
City Press
retrieved
its
electronics,
did a
Periscope
broadcast (here) and this story,
from the stone
chess
(actually
backgammon)
table across
Worth Street
from the SDNY
courthouse.
We'll be here
more.
Upcoming in the
SDNY is a just-filed complaint
by the Bangladesh Central Bank
for the $81 million hacking of
its funds, which were then
wired through the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York, a case
that Inner City Press will
cover. Times change. Watch
this site.
***
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