MCC Staff Charged With Sex
Abuse Seeks Suppression After US Said Flight
Risk to Nigeria
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Periscope video
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
August 24 – When Colin
Akparanta was brought in
shackles, accused of sexually
abusing female prisoners under
his control in the
Metropolitan Correctional
Center prison, into the U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York's Magistrates Court
on May 21, his wife
had been
waiting for
him for hours.
So too his
for now
publicly paid
lawyer. After
a reading of
the charges,
Akparanta
was offered
$200,000 bail
but only when others
sign on to it.
The U.S.
Attorney's
Office will go
to the
house he owns
in Irvington, New
Jersey to pick
up his two
guns, and then
store them in
a vault. His
lawyer
said Yes, he would
be engaging in
discussions about a
pre-trial
disposition, meaning
a plea.
Times
change. Now in
August, before
District Judge Lorna G.
Schofield, Akpanta's
lawyer is arguing for
suppression
and to strike
a filing
from the docket - a
filing that
even before
the motion is
heard is not
available on
PACER outside
the
courthouse.
Here's from
the motion for
suppression
and more: "the
undersigned
will move
before the
Honorable
Lorna G.
Schofield in
the United
States
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York, at a
date and time
convenient to
the Court, for
an Order,
1.
Suppressing
all physical
evidence
seized
pursuant to
the October
15, 2018
search
warrant;
2.
Requiring the
government to
provide the
names and
other
pertinent
information
regarding the
four victims
identified in
the
indictment;
3.
Allowing
defendant,
counsel and an
investigator
entry into the
MCC to
photograph the
second floor
women’s unit;
4.
Requiring the
immediate
production of
all BOP
records
concerning the
victims
identified in
the
indictment;
5.
Concerning
scheduling the
early
disclosure of
3500, Brady,
Giglio, trial
exhibits and
witness lists
and, and for
such other and
further relief
as the Court
deems just and
proper. Dated:
August 22,
2019 Nicholas
Kaizer, Esq.
LEVITT &
KAIZER 40
Fulton Street,
23rd Floor."
We'll have more
on this.
Back on
May 21 the
government
argued for a
curfew, saying
that Akparanta
is a
naturalized
U.S. citizen
originally
from Nigeria
to which he
retains strong
ties.
He didn't try
to flee when
first
questioned -
but it seems
he thought he
was under
investigation
only for bringing
contraband
into the MCC
for female
prisoners, not for the sex
acts he traded
the contraband
and control
for.
The
unsealed
indictment in
USA v. Akparanta
lists as his nicknames
or aliases "Africa"
and "Akon." (A
commenter on
Inner
City Press' thread about
the
arraignment
noted that the
singer Akon is
not, in fact,
from Nigeria -
but neither is
Africa a
country.)
Akparanta's
lawyer expressed
concern
about where he
would be
detained on
the night of
May 21 while
awaiting
another signer for
his bond
and the
retrieval of
his guns. The
prosecutors
said he will
not be in
general
population or
even in any
Bureau of
Prisons facility
but rather a
contract one
(sounds like
GEO, a
private
prison.)
The government
asked that
time be excluded under
the Speedy
Trial Act for
discovery, which
they said is
voluminous
even though
the complaint
says the sex
acts took place
off camera,
referring to
"The Bubble," and
to discusss a pre-trial
disposition,
meaning a
plea. Judge
Freeman
asked Akparanta's
lawyer
if he anticipated
engaging in
such discussions.
Yes, was the
answer. So how
long, in a
private prison? Inner
City Press
will continue to
cover this
case, and
others.
Magistrate
Judge Debra
Freedman, presiding
over SDNY
Courtroom 5A
for the
week, said the
government's
proposal of a
curfew
as a way to
prevent flight
to Nigeria did
not make sense. She
ordered that
Akparanta not
have contact
with any
current or
former inmates
except in the
presence of
his (still publicly
paid) counsel,
which implies
he will not be
going back to
work as a
correctional
officer any
time soon.
***
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