Sex Offender Who Took
Cocaine Bounced From MCC To Valhalla Gets Time
Served From Judge Hellerstein
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Exclusive Patreon
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
Sept 4 –
A registered sex offender who
pled guilty to using cocaine
while on Supervised Released
was sentenced to his thirty
days time served and the same
continuing amount of
supervised released on
September 4 by U.S. District
Court for the Southern
District of New York Judge
Alvin K. Hellerstein.
While the
Assistant US Attorney
sputtered that a time served
sentence would merely
encourage other supervisees to
relapse, Judge Hellerstein
ended up saying he would grant
exactly what Patrick Townzen's
Federal Defender Julia Gallo
wanted. Many in the courtroom
were surprised.
But there's more.
It turns out Townzen was
arrested on August 3 and not
presented in SDNY Magistrates
Court until days later on
August 6. Assistant US
Attorney Jacob R. Fiddelman
recounted that "the Marshals
were turned away from the MCC
when they tried to lodge the
defendant overnight. They
therefore brought the
defendant to the Westchester
County Jail in Valhalla, New
York, where he was lodged" -
for days.
As Inner
City Press has previously
reported from the Mag Court,
defendants when in Valhalla
cannot for example place calls
to Venezuela. Stranger and
more detailed to things become
in the SDNY. Watch this site.
On April 29
before Judge Hellerstein, a
defendant out of bail awaiting
trial on racketeering charges
was accused by the Office of
the U.S. Attorney for the
South District of New York of
domestic violence, for the
second time in nine months.
But the Office's
request to revoke Eugene
Castelle's bail was denied by
SDNY Judge Alvin K.
Hellerstein, who instead
advised Castelle to keep the
twice abused woman away from
him.
As recounted by
Assistant US Attorney Jason
Swergold to a courtroom in
which Inner City Press was the
only media present, Castelle
strangled a woman such that
her throat showed red marks.
Swergold said the same thing
had happened in August 2018,
with the same
woman.
Castelle through
his lawyer Gerald J. McMahon
said that the woman had been
drunk both times. He said the
woman, Castelle's girlfriend
for five years, had called him
to said that her father had
died. But when Castelle
arrived with condolences at 8
am he smelled liquor on her
breath, and learned that the
deceased was in fact her
girlfriend, Nicole Fontana.
Castelle returned at 1 pm to
take his car back from his
girlfriend.
While AUSA
Swergold asked rhetorically
how it was OK in all of this
for the woman to be strangled
- he said that the 121st
Precinct had photographs -
Judge Hellerstein said he was
not going to modify Castelle's
bail conditions. "I don't
think I should do anything,"
Judge Hellerstein said, adding
"I wish I could draw up a
perfect
world."
Then Judge
Hellerstein questioned or
instructed Castelle directly,
asking, Are you still
together?
"Not really,"
Castelle
said.
"You have to
resist," Hellerstein said,
advising Castelle to have
someone with him if, as the
judge put it, the woman came
over and tried to be close
with him or touch him. Judge
Hellerstein asked if Castelle
has any close neighbor to do
this.
Castelle replied
that there is "a kid who takes
out my garbage." Hellerstein
shook his head. Castelle also
said that family members could
reach out to the woman and
tell her to stay
away.
Judge Hellerstein
asked Castelle, Her family or
yours?
Mine, Castelle
said. "They'll make sure
she'll stay away from
me."
Judge Hellerstein
said he couldn't have
Castelle's family threatening
the woman. He said, "You have
to resist."
Afterward Inner City Press
asked one of the participants
about what he just happened.
Judge Hellerstein is sometimes
like that, was the response.
He says these
things.
The trial,
something of a follow up to
the US v Cammarano trial that
Inner City Press covered
earlier this year that
resulted in acquittal, is set
to begin in May. More here,
on Patreon. Watch this site.
More than a year
ago, Sajid Javed pled guilty
to $7 million of Medicade
fraud through seven
pharmacies, charging for
prescription drugs never
dispensed to customers.
Usually the gap between a plea
and sentencing is far less.
But in this case Javed
contested the loss amount, and
his doctor wife was continuing
in a medical residency. This
last arose on April 26 in the
U.S. Southern District of New
York courtroom of Judge Vernon
S. Broderick.
Javed's
lawyer said his client stood
out in his support of his
wife's career because, he
said, there is resistance to
female doctors in their native
Pakistan. Then he asked that
actually going to jail be put
off into the summer... of
2020.
Judge
Broderick wondered if this was
even possible, and said he did
not like long gaps between
imposing sentence and it
beginning to be served, since
things can change. While
called it unusual, he allowed
Javed's doctor wife to speak
from the gallery. She said due
to her age, 39, she is already
old for the residency. By next
year, she said, her four year
old son will be in soon. He
meanwhile was eating Lay's
potato chips and looking up
smiling over the gallery bench
at Inner City Press, the only
media present (which joked
back).
Eventually
the sentencing was put off.
The Assistant US Attorney said
she would speak with Javed's
lawyer. [More including on
backround and counsel and
index number
here on Patreon.]
Somewhere else in the SDNY,
a nineteen year old was being
sentenced to four years to
begin this
and not next summer.
When
Robert Espinel who pled guilty
in the NYPD gun license
scandal appeared for
sentencing on April 26, the
U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York
courtroom of Judge Edgardo
Ramos was full of Espinel
supporters, some of whom
cried.
Espinel spoke,
but much shorted than his
co-defendant Paul Dean who
received an 18 month sentence
from Judge Ramos back in
January. Espinel did however
mention both Nine Eleven and
super storm Sandy.
Judge Ramos
praised Espinel for attending
his daughters' sports events -
something he said he wished
he'd made time to do - but
called Espinel's betrayal of
his position "confounding"
before imposing a sentence of
a year and a day, followed by
two years of supervised
release.
Here's from the
US Attorney's January press
release (for some reason the
Office did not publicize
Friday's Espinel sentencing)
-- "Robert Espinel was a
member of the NYPD from 1995
through his retirement in
2016, and was assigned to the
License Division from 2011
through 2016. From
at least 2013 through 2016,
multiple NYPD officers in the
License Division serving under
DEAN’s command, including
David Villanueva and Richard
Ochetal, solicited and
accepted bribes from gun
license expediters – including
Frank Soohoo, Alex
Lichtenstein, a/k/a “Shaya,”
and co-defendant Gaetano
Valastro, a former NYPD
detective – in exchange for
providing assistance to the
expediters’ clients in
obtaining gun licenses quickly
and often with little to no
diligence. In 2015 DEAN
and Espinel decided to retire
and go into the expediting
business themselves. In
order to ensure the success of
their business, DEAN and
Espinel planned to bribe
Villanueva and Ochetal, who
were still in the License
Division, to enable their
clients to get special
treatment. They also
agreed with Valastro to run
their expediting and bribery
scheme out of Valastro’s gun
store. According to the
plan, Valastro would benefit
from the scheme because DEAN
and Espinel would steer
successful applicants to
Valastro’s store to buy
guns. They also tried to
corner the expediting market
by forcing other expediters to
work through them.
Specifically, DEAN and Espinel
attempted to coerce Frank
Soohoo, another gun license
expediter, into sharing his
expediting clients with them
by threatening to use their
influence in the License
Division to shut down Soohoo’s
expediting business if Soohoo
refused to work with, and make
payments to, DEAN and Espinel.
"
As if in a
parallel universe, Roberto
Sanchez pled guilty to
narcotics offensed in the U.S.
District Court for the Central
District of Pennsylvania in
2017 and was to appeared to
sentenced, with a mandatory
five year minimum.
Then he
disappeared.
On April
24 he reappeared in the U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York
arraignments
courtroom,
presided over
by this
week by retiring
Magistrate
Judge Henry Pitman.
Unlike
most here,
including
Michael
Avenatti, he
was not asking
for a free
lawyer. His retained
counsel Angelo
Antonio
Castro III
told Judge Pitman
that Sanchez is
supporting
three children
in The Bronx
and had never,
in reality,
fled.
Judge Pitman
said that one
can as surely
flee in a
metropolitan area
as to
Timbuktu, and
that in any
event, remand
to the MCC was
mandatory.
But
Sanchez'
lawyer simply
would not give
up, insisted
first that the
Pennsylvania
plea was been
based on
coersion -
Judge Pitman
said the
warrant was
valid on its
face - then
finally asking
that under
Rule 20 of the
Federal
Rules of Civil
Procedure
the delayed
sentencing now
be moved to
the SDNY.
Chaos ensued.
Judge Pitman
to his credit
- we say
this in light
of yesterday's
reporting -
did not
dismiss this
Hail Mary out
of hand,
saying it was
a case of
firs impression.
The AUSA said
there was
no consent;
Judge Pitman
replied that neither
Office has
been asked. Finally
reference was
made to "Part
I" as an
appellate
remedy,
something about
which Inner
City Press the
only media in
the courtroom
asked about on
the way out.
Watch this
site, and @SDNYLIVE.
***
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