In
SDNY Judge Rakoff Hears His
Decisions Quoted To Him After
Soft Sim and Chuck e Cheese
Deliberation
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Periscope video
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
May 3 – The conflux of big
money lawyering, the feeding
of pride and a glimmer of
actual intellectual interest
were all on display on the
afternoon of May 3 in the U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York
courtroom of
Judge Jed
Rakoff. In a
lawsuit
between investment
adviser
Beechwood, a Mr Hyde - no
Jekyll - and
the Senior
Health
Insurance
Company of
Pennsylvania
(SHIP), all
sides quoted
Judge Rakoff's
previous
decisions and
he seemed
quite pleased with
it. Each courtroom
and chambers
in the SDNY is
its own
kingdom, as even
the curent
chief judge
has
written.
The case is
Levy v. Senior
Health
Insurance
Company of
Pennsylvania,
19-cv-03211-JSR
The day before on
May 2 a Chinese firm claiming
patent to so-called "soft SIM"
technology laid its claim, how
ever haltingly, in the
courtroom of
Judge Rakoff.
Their witness
couldn't
remember what
he'd said
during his
deposition,
and insisted
he owned the
patent to the
whole concept,
the whole
system, a SIM
without a hard
SIM card, a
future of
roaming like the
Chinese Navy
in the South
China Sea.
Judge
Rakoff
repeatedly had
to tell the
witness to
answer yes or
no and not
just nod; even
in the deposition
transcript
read back he
had said "hmm hmm."
His colleagues
followed it
intently, one of
them in the
gallery with
his laptop
open. Had it
been stripped of
its network
card? Or was
this soft too?
Inner
City Press
may
have more on
this.
Hours later on May 2 when
Malik Gray came to be
sentenced for his role in a
scheme that defrauded and
stole from drivers for Uber
and Lyft in The Bronx, in the
back of the SDNY courtroom
of Judge Jed
Rakoff were
two U.S.
Marshals. They
had been
alerted to be
ready in case
Judge Rakoff
ordered Gray
immediately
remanded.
Gray has been
under house
detention for
more than 13
months, and
Judge Rakoff
zeroed in on
times he has
gone out
without
excuse. The
longest one
cited was on
April 18, from
4:31 pm to
7:36 pm.
Gray's lawyer
Arnold J.
Levine was
ready: this
had been to
attend Gray's
son's birthday
party at Chuck
e Cheese,
something
Judge Rakoff
himself had
signed off on.
Already remand
seemed less
likely.
Another
unauthorized
stepping out
of the house
was to speak
to his son's
mother. Judge
Rakoff asked
why she
couldn't come
into the
house. The
family doesn't
want her to
come in,
Levine
explained,
their
inter-personal
communication
inside are not
what they
could be.
Judge Rakoff,
who slyly
quoted his
article in the
New York
Review of
Books about
eye witness
identification
at a March 19
proceeding in
the case, also
asked about
Gray having
impregnated
two different
women, and
being left by
the second of
them when she
found him
texting with a
third woman.
Levine quoted
divorce
statistics -
Rakoff shot
back that Gray
has short
circuited the
whole marry
and divorce
merry go round
- and then
said that
staying
together for
the kids is
not the best
approach.
Judge Rakoff
said that Gray
was cheating,
or that the
mother of his
newborn son
thought that
he was
cheating, "not
without
reason." He
acknowledged
that he did
not have
enough basis
to form a
conclusion,
and turned to
his other
sentences in
the wider ride
share rip off
case. He
sentenced
George Joseph
to 42 months
and Devon
Williams to 36
months. Levine
wanted 24
months for
Gray and
started
arguing under
the sentencing
guidelines.
Judge Rakoff
told him that
he did not
consider
those, but
wanted to hear
about relative
culpability
and any
disparities in
sentencing.
The wider case
is USA v.
Pina,
et al.,
18-cr-00179
(JSR).
Ultimately
Judge Rakoff
sentenced Gray
to 36 months,
the same as
Devon
Williams, and
three years of
Supervised
Relief. They
owe $441,775
in
restitution.
But Gray was
not remanded,
the Marshals
left into
their corridor
before Rakoff
set June 25
for Gray to
report to
wherever he is
assigned. He
has requested
near
Bridgeport,
Connecticut to
be near his
mother. He
said he won't
target Uber
and Lyft
drivers in the
future because
he wouldn't
want it done
to him, that
he'd done it
in order to
feed his
children. Call
it the Chuck e
Cheese
defense.
By contrast on
May 1 defendant Jesus Lopez
walked into the SDNY courtroom
of Judge Valerie E. Caproni to
be sentenced on May 1 for
driving 10 kilograms of
cocaine from California to New
York.
He was
wearing a suit; he had been
allowed out on bond while
awaiting sentencing due to his
mother having Stage Four
cancer. Before the sentencing
he uploaded a video directed
at Judge Caproni but still
online as of this writing on
Vimeo, here.
The
courtroom was full, with two
U.S. Marshals in the back row,
and the two front rows, Inner
City Press was later informed
by a participant in the
proceeding, filled by judges
from China. Lopez' lawyer Jeff
Greco argued in his sentencing
submission for time served,
essentially one month.
But Judge
Caproni, after asking
Assistant U.S. Attorney Nathan
Rhen why the government wasn't
seeking forfeiture of the
truck Lopez used to drive the
drugs - "there's a lot of
equity in there," she said --
looked sternly at Lopez.
Judge Caproni was not
impressed by Lopez' statement
that he took drugs because he
was bored, that boredom was
one of his triggers. She said
she did not believe that he
had only agreed to drive the
drugs in order to feed his own
habit. First she sentenced him
to 60 month, five years, in
prison.
Then as
the U.S. Marshals rustled in
the row behind Inner City
Press, she said she would be
remanding Lopex into custody
today. Right now. Her
courtroom deputy handed the
Marshals an order to that
effect.
Defense attorney Greco said
that Lopez' mother could die
at any time, and that the
Bureau of Prisons would be
unlikely to let him out to
attend her funeral. Judge
Caproni said there was no way
to know when his mother would
die, and that she had allowed
him to remain out on bond
pending sentencing so he could
spent time with her. The
Chinese judges sat as Jesus
Lopez took his wallet out of
his pants and put his hands
out for shackling.
A well known
courtroom
artist in the
SDNY has told
Inner City
Press about
the time she
managed to
sketch a
similar remand
of a higher
profile
defendant,
Bernie Madoff.
But there was
no artist
present for
the remand of
Jesus Lopez,
and cameras
are not
allowed - only
this article.
The case is U.S.
v. Lopez,
part of the
larger
conspiracy
prosecution U.S.
v. Soto et al.,
18-cr-00282
(Caproni).
Notably one
floor above in
40
Foley Square,
a man who pled
guilty to
stealing $7
million in
Medicare and
Medicaid fraud
has had his
sentencing
delayed for a
year already,
and perhaps
another year,
so that his
wife can
finish a
medical
residency
program. That
case is U.S
v. Javed,
16-cr-00601-VSB.
Unlike the
unpublicized
case of Jesus
Lopez,
the Office of
the US
Attorney for
the SDNY
announced the
Javed
sentencing to
the press (but
not its
subsequent
deferral).
Click here
for that
story.
Which approach
is the right
one? How can
these
disparities be
explained?
These are
among the
questions that
Inner City
Press will be
pursuing, in
the SDNY.
Watch this
site, and the
new @SDNYLIVE
Twitter feed.
Background: Even
in Judge Caproni's courtroom,
there are more positive or
lenient stories. When Todd
Howe, who pled guilty in the
New York State corruption
case(s), came up for
sentencing on April 5, Judge
Caproni was
told that Howe
is now working
more than 12
hours a day in
Idaho, on ski
slopes and now
a golf course.
After his
guilty plea he
had been
remanded to
the
Metropolitan
Correctional
Center when he
disputed to
Capital One
some credit
card charges
and the
government
believed it to
be another
attempted
fraud.
With
him out of MCC
for seven
months, Judge
Caproni said
it may have
just been a
mistake. She
put off
sentencing
Howe, instead
putting him on
five years
probation. If
he "stays
clean" during
that time, it
all goes away.
If not, he
faces serious
time.
In the
elevator down
after Howe's
lawyer, in
what she
called her
last criminal
sentencing,
said Howe
still respects
government
service after
his lobbying
career
meltdown,
Inner City
Press asked
Howe what he
thought for
example of
congestion
pricing. He
laughed and
said it is not
needed in
Idaho.
Meanwhile a
shackled
prisoner Jones
was led into
Judge
Caproni's now
empty
courtroom to
plead guilty
to selling
crack in The
Bronx and
hiding a gun
after a 1999
felony
conviction.
That
sentencing is
set for August
1. Inner City
Press and @SDNYLIVE will be there.
***
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