After
Nigeria UN Mission Ran Over NY
Paralegal Cites Passenger Secret
Task in Abuja
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
August 22 – A
few blocks
from the
United Nations
on 49th Street
and Second
Avenue on 6
April 2018
Jennifer A.
Edward was
heading to her
work as a
lawfirm
paralegal when
a Nigerian
Mission to the
UN vehicle
struck her,
causing
serious
injury.
The vehicle's
registration
and insurance
were both
expired, in
violation of
the U.S.
Diplomatic
Relations
Act.
And, Inner
City Press
learned on
August 22,
there was a
passenger who
is now back in
Nigeria.
The
driver who was
working for
Nigeria's
Mission had
previously had
accidents. But
Nigeria and
its mission
refused to
pay, or even
fo months to
respond to the
lawsuit that
was filed, and
legally served
as far away as
Nigeria. Call
it impunity,
so prevalent
in and around
the
UN.
On
July 10 the
case came up
before U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York Judge
Paul G.
Gardephe.
While denying
Ms. Edward's
motion for
default
judgment,
Judge Gardephe
essentially
mocked the
Nigerian
Mission's
argument that
they needed
more time to
explore the
issue of
pre-existing
condition. On
consent, he
referred the
case to
Magistrate
Judge Debra
Freeman.
On August 22
Inner City
Press went to
the initial
conference
before Judge
Freeman, whom
it recently
covered during
her week
presiding over
the
Magistrates
Court. She
brought
practicality
there,
including an 8
pm phone call
to a
defendant's
parents in
Arizona - and
now to the
Nigeria
Mission case.
She urged them
to settle.
Nigeria's UN
Mission, which
first in
typical UN
style tried to
simply thumb
its nose at
the law, later
retained the
Foley Hoag
firm. Their
Shrutih V.
Tewarie on
August 22 said
that the
passenger in
the
(uninsured)
car was on a
mission for
the government
at the time of
the crash.
While Judge
Freeman joked
"a mission for
the Mission,"
it may be
important to
know who the
passenger was,
and what they
were doing in
New York.
Watch this
site.
Ms.
Edward is in
her 20s, and
has run a New
York City
marathon. The
Nigerian
mission in
belated
filings with
Judge Gardephe
has tried to
blame their
failure to
response on
the recent
elections
leading to the
continuation
of rule by
President
Buhari.
Inner
City Press,
having seen
Buhari's
administration
engage in
illegal refoulement
to Cameroon,
unremarked on
by the UN's
Nigerian
Deputy
Secretary
General Amina
J. Mohammed,
and having
seen the UN
claim impunity
for cholera in
Haiti and
roughing up
and banning
the Press in
New York, went
to cover the
July 10
proceeding.
Afterward
it spoke
generally with
Ms. Edward's
lawyer Scott
A. Harford. He
explained the
difficulty of
getting the
lawsuit served
in Nigeria,
and the lack
of
responsiveness
by the U.S.
Mission to the
UN which is
supposed to
ensure that
other
countries'
Missions to
the UN at
least maintain
car insurance.
The
case is moving
to Magistrate
Judge Debra C.
Freeman, more
on Patreon here, and Inner City
Press will
continue to
cover and
pursue this
and other
related cases
against
impunity.
Vivian
Wang, who as
money manager
for convicted
UN briber Ng
Lap Seng's
South South
News made
payments to
disgraced
President of
the UN General
Assembly John
Ashe, was
given a time
served
sentence on
June 26 by
U.S. District
Court for the
Southern
District of
New York Judge
George B.
Daniels.
Wang's lawyers
at Goodwin
Proctor, in a
heavily
redacted
sentencing
submission,
stated that
her deceased
husband Forest
Cao "was 57
years old adn
had no known
health
problems of
medical
conditions. No
autopsy was
performed."
It
also says, as
to UN
President of
the General
Assembly John
Ashe, that
while awaiting
trial on UN
bribery
charges "his
death was
reported as
the result of
a
'weightlifting
accident'
after a
barbell
apparently
crushed his
throat."
After the
sentencing,
Inner City
Press with
covered the Ng
Lap Seng trial
before SDNY
Judge Vernon
Broderick
daily asked
Wang's lawyer
Derek A. Cohen
if he was
implying that
Forest Cao and
John Ashe were
killed, and
why he had so
heavily
redacted this
sentencing
submission.
"It
speaks for
itself," Cohen
said by the
elevators.
Likewise the
Assistant U.S.
Attorney on
the case Daniel
C. Richenthal
declined
Inner City
Press'
question about
who beyond Ng
Lap Seng Ms.
Wang had
cooperated
against.
Judge
Daniels did
not preside
over the trial
of Ng Lap
Seng. He
accepted the
government's
recommendation
of time served
with very
little
inquiry.
He said as if
by rote that
corruption of
the UN is a
serious
matter. But if
so, why should
a person who
paid bribes in
the UN get
such a light
sentence with
little public
showing of the
benefit of
their
cooperation?
Corruption has
continued at
the UN since
the
prosecution of
Ng Lap Seng,
resulting in
his four year
prison
sentence. A
second,
separately
prosecution
was brought
against
Patrick Ho of
CEFC China
Energy, an entity
which also
tried to buy
the oil
company of
Lisbon-based
Gulbenkian
Foundation
which employed
current UN
Secretary
General
Antonio
Guterres as a
compensated
board member.
Neither in the
Ho nor Ng Lap
Seng cases
where any of
the UN
Secretariat
officials
implicated in
the bribery
schemes
prosecuted.
This laxity
can be
contrasted
with another
SDNY
proceeding a
mere hour
later, in
which Judge P.
Kevin Castel
looked behind
the U.S.
Attorney's
Office's 5k1.1
cooperation
letters and
imposed jail
time on the
four siblings,
the Seggermans,
who evaded
taxes. That
underlying
case was USA
v. Little,
12-cr-647
(Castel). This
bifurcated
case is USA
v. Wang,
16-cr-495
(Daniels).
Vivi
Wang helped
bribe the UN,
and on June 26
she got a time
served
sentence for
undefined
cooperation.
Judge Castel
looked behind
the
government's
5K1.1 letter
but Judge
Daniels did
not. And the
UN continues
corrupt. Inner
City Press
will have
more, much
more, on this.
***
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