In
SDNY Jeremy Reichberg Gets 4
Years For Bribes to NYPD As
Huberfeld and Ho Compared
By Matthew
Russell Lee
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
May 13 – Donor to and
fundraiser for NYC Mayor Bill
De Blasio Jeremy Reichberg had
been scheduled to be sentenced
for bribery on April 4, but it
was pushed back to May 13.
After nearly three hours of
argument, Reichberg was
sentenced for 48 months in
prison, to begin on August 12,
and a $50,000 fine. As is his
way, U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern District of
New York Judge
Gregory
Woods dug
deal into the
pres-sentencing
report, which
in this case
involved a
video with
high production
values, unlike
the single
angle video
that recently
preceded the
immediate
remand of narcotics
defendant
Jesus Lopez by
SDNY Judge Valerie
Caproni.
These type of
comparisons
were rife at Reichberg's
May 13
sentencing.
His lawyer Susan
R. Necheles
pointedly
noted that
Assistant U.S.
Attorney
Martin S. Bell
had
argued for
only one year
in prison for
Murray Huberfeld for
bribing the
boldest of NYC's
Boldest,
Norman Seabrook.
Bell wrote
that off to a
decision on a
plea agreement
and noted that
SDNY Judge
Alvin
Hellerstein
sentenced
Huberfeld to
30 months.
This, Inner
City Press
readers will
remember, is
all that
Patrick Ho got
for bribery at
the United
Nations. But
Bell made the
NYPD out to be
the greatest
police force
(albeit only
that the
people of this
city know).
Ms. Necheles
objected to
Bell
recounting
what unnamed
police
officers said
about the
importance for
their
credibility of
rooting out
bad apples.
The gallery
was full; one
attendee
blurted out,
"Where the
public
officials?"
Where indeed.
We'll have
more on this.
ThIn
April, one
dispute
involved
whether the
full $60,000 cost of
a private jet
to Las Vegas
should be
counted, since
Jona Rechnitz
claimed he
owned the
plane. Assistant
US Attorney
Bell said it
should, that
mere first
class air fare
to McCarran in
Vegas wasn't
the same.
Judge Woods,
so often with
the underdog,
seemed torn: is
this
defendants really
an underdog? The
proceeding was
moved from Woods'
usually empty
courtroom 12C
up to the
larger 23A and
it was almost
full.
Reichberg's
lawyer will be
out of the
country from
April 16 to
nearly the end
of the month.
But the
sentencing
will happen -
and Inner City
Press will be
there, watch
this site.Inne on
tnearlpm
Also on April 4,
as if in the parallel
universe, a long time petty
criminal was brought shackled
into the SDNY, after serving
three years in state
penitentiary for stealing
appliances from a department
store. This was deemed a
violation of supervised
release, and the Assistant US
Attorney argued for no bail.
But Stanley Bamber was born in
Newark and still has family in
New Jersey. He could live with
his brother, his assigned
lawyer argued, pending
arguments before SDNY
Judge Alison
Nathan,
occupied the
same day with
Elon Musk. It
was finally agreed that
if Probation
approves and radio
frequency
electronic
monitoring is in
place, the 60
year old
Bambury may
see the light
of day. Between
1976 and 2000,
the prosecutor
said, Bamber
was charged
with crimes
35 times. His
was the last case of
the day; in
the elevator
Inner City
Press asked
the AUSA
about his
record and got
a Have a good
night. Okay
then - just
another day in
the SDNY. Johnny
Morgan is suing
the United States
for a rectal search he
endured
in the
Metropolitan
Correctional
Center at 150
Park Row,
right next to
the SDNY. On
April 4 before
SDNY Magistrate Judge Debra
Freeman, the government
presented an expert Roy
Lubit who said that
Morgan is a "malingerer"
and blamed
his pain on
abuse suffered
earlier at the
hand of
his own mother. But
even
government
expert Lubit
said that the
rectal entry
should not
have happened.
It is,
in fact, an outrage.
Inner City
Press was the
only media in
the smallish courtroom,
compared to
dozens of
reporters two
hours later
for Elon Musk.
While some
might question
taxpayer money
going to pay damages for
what happened
to Mr. Morgan,
what about
public money
for an expert
witness to
insult the
torturee?
We'll have
more on
this.
***
Feedback: Editorial [at]
innercitypress.com
Box
20047, Dag Hammarskjold Station NY
NY 10017
Other, earlier Inner
City Press are listed here,
and some are available in the ProQuest
service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
Copyright 2006-2019 Inner
City Press, Inc. To request reprint or
other permission, e-contact Editorial
[at] innercitypress.com for
|