Freyling Vizcaino Faced 121
Month Guideline, Gets 68 Months For Mother's
Abandonment
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Exclusive Patreon
BBC
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SDNY COURTHOUSE,
July 22 -- Three men were
arrested at 6:30 pm on
February 25, 2020 and a full
day later on February 26 they
were presented in U.S.
District Court for the
Southern District of New York
Magistrates Court.
Although not
disclosed on February 26, two
of the men were relatives.
Each was
assigned his own lawyer, each
of whom negotiated in the
near-empty courtroom with
Assistant US Attorney Jacob R.
Fiddelman. Two were offered
bail packages but for the
third, the US sought
detention.
This third
man was listed as Christopher
Colon Acevedo. But in a prior
proceeding he was Christopher
Adam Colon, and also Eduardo
Vizcaino. The Colons said they
were American citizens, born
in Puerto Rico; Eduardo
Vizcaino, apparently the third
man's real or initial name,
was born in the Dominican
Republic.
On
February 26, SDNY Magistrate
Judge Sarah L. Cave took the
cases in ascending order of
difficulty. The first
defendant, named Freyling
Vizcaino - as it emerged on
February 27, a relative of
Eduardo Vizcaino -- through
assigned counsel agreed to a
bail package, which would
leave him another night in the
Metropolitan Correctional
Center while his residence was
checked by Pre-Trial
Services.
Now on
July 22, 2021, Judge Richard
M. Berman held the sentencing
of Freyling Vizcaino. He faced
a guideline beginning at 121
months. Judge Berman, reading
from the pre-sentencing
report, said that Freyling's
mother had abandoned him in
the Dominican Republic at age
two, when she came to New
York. Then he was abandoned
again, Judge Berman said, at
age 19. Judge Berman said he
was trying to save his life,
imposing a sentence of 68
months.
The second
defendant Franklin Vasquez
Rodriguez through CJA lawyer
Zachary Taylor pushed for
release the same night. Taylor
said that his client had been
detained for 25 hours without
being given a single meal. He
said it was "beginning to
resemble something not worthy
of the United States."
AUSA
Fiddelman took issue with
that, replying that "there is
nothing unjust about our legal
system spinning its wheels as
it does, discussion of whether
it is American or not is
besides the point."
Magistrate Judge Cave offered
bail condition, but only after
a visit of the defendant's
home.
But
for the third defendant,
Christopher Adam Colon Acevedo
or really Eduardo Vizcaino,
AUSA Fiddelman sought
detention. He noted that the
defendant was already under
Supervised Release after
sentencing by SDNY District
Judge Paul A. Engelmayer.
Inner City
Press, the only media in the
Magistrates Court on February
26, see first exclusive on
this case here,
has gone back and found this
case: US v. Christopher Adam
Colon, 16-cr-94 (Engelmayer).
It involved the defendant
picking up $57,000 for the
sale of between one and three
kilograms of heroin, in a BMW.
On a guideline of 70 to 87
months, Judge Engelmayer
sentenced the defendant to 18
months and three years of
Supervised Release. More on
Patreon here.
In this
case, the defendant was
arrested leaving an apartment
from the Complaint says sounds
of grinding and odors of drug
processing chemical eminated
(Warner twice likened it to a
Jamba Juice at closing time).
Inside were found cocaine and
heroin, ostensibly in an open
closet. In this apartment,
there was no bed.
On
February 26 Federal Defender
Ariel Warner complained that
despite what she said is an
agreement between Federal
Defenders and Pre Trial
Services that FD clients will
not be interviewed without
their counsel present, her
client was.
The
results of that interview were
discrepancies between Colon
Acevedo / Eduardo Vizcaino's
interviews with Probation in
his case before Judge
Engelmayer and Pre Trial
Services in the instant case,
including on whether he is or
is not a U.S. citizen.
Judge Cave after a recess in
her robing room to confer with
Pre Trial Services offered
terms of release, to begin
after a home visit. AUSA
Fiddelman asked her to stay
her decision for 48 hours to
allow an appeal to the Part I
judge - who, Inner City Press
reported on the evening of
February 26 when the case was
not yet even in the PACER
system, is for this week like
last none other than Judge
Englemayer. Inner City Press
was the only media in the Mag
Court for this case and those
preceding it, about a madame
and a money launderer, and
also alone in Judge
Engelmayer's Part I courtroom
for a recent bail denial, here.
Past
7 pm on February 26 Judge Cave
stayed her order until the US
appealed, which Fiddelman said
would be February 27.
Inner City Press looked into
and went to the appeal on
February 27, at 11:45 am.
Judge Engelmayer brought up
the prior sentencing, and name
discrepancy, and put questions
to a Pre Trial Officer named
Bostick.
AUSA
Fiddleman emphasized the
shifting stories and said the
defendant might be prosecuted
for false statements under 18
U.S.C. Section 1001.
Federal Defender Warner called
this outrageous, and provided
more detail on what she said
was Pre Trial Services', or
Assistant US Attorney Daniel
Nessim's, violation of a
seemingly unwritten protocol
for clients of Federal
Defenders but not of CJA
lawyers.
Apparently, Pre Trial Services
has agreed in all instances
that defendants who are
assigned Federal Defenders
have their lawyers present for
the interview for the
pre-trial report. But for
those with CJA lawyers, Warner
said, that is only on a case
by case basis.
Apparently
some CJA don't want to, or
don't have time to, be present
for these interview, which can
be held against their client.
Or, like here, Pre Trial
Services does the interviews
before any CJA has been
assigned and could waive
presence.
What
happened here, according to
Warner, is that AUSA Nessim
erroneously - unintentionally,
we presuming, having covered
Nessim for some time - said
that Federal Defenders had a
conflict of interest in
representing Colon Acevedo /
Eduardo Vizcaino. So Pre Trial
Services, in the form of
officer Bostick, conducted the
interview with no lawyer
present - no CJA yet assigned
- and asked, are you an
American citizen? To which the
defendant said yes, apparently
untruthfully.
Judge
Engelmayer before ruling asked
Bostick about the tenor of the
interview, if he thought it
possible the defendant had
misunderstood the question,
through the interpreter.
Bostick replied that while it
was possible, it did not seem
likely to him.
Warner
emphasized that her client had
only a sixth grade education
back in the Domincan Republic,
from which she conceded he
originates.
In fact,
at his sentencing before Judge
Engelmayer on April 17, 2017
his then lawyer (and still
CJA) Telesforo Del Valle said,
"Mr Colon's 33 years old, has
only received a sixth grade
elementary school education in
the Dominican Republic." Del
Valle also said, "the first
thing Mr. Colon told me when
he met me was My name is
Eduardo Vizcaino." Judge
Engelmayer in the same
proceeding read from a letter
from his neice, Luisanny
Hidalgo Vizcaino. At sidebar,
Judge Engelmayer asked Del
Valle about the letters "about
Eduardo Vizcaino, I'm not sure
what the purpose of those is."
Del Valle replied, "Mr.
Colon's true name is Eduardo
Vizcaino."
Judge
Engelmayer nevertheless
sentencing him to three years
of supervised release rather
than await an immigration
detainer and deportation. And
he was never deported;
Fiddleman on February 27 said,
ICE makes mistakes.
Judge
Engelmayer overruled
Magistrate Judge Cave's
decision, with sorrow, he
said. He rejected Warner's
plea that her client get at
least 48 hours before the now
inevitable Violation of
Supervised Release proceeding,
in order to get his affairs in
order including speaking with
loved ones and preparing money
for jailhouse commissary. AUSA
Fiddleman said this "Forty
Eight Hours" window would
present a hightened risk of
flight.
Judge Engelmayer
overruled Judge Cave and
ordered the defendant
remanded. But the questions
about Pre Trial Services
attorneyless interviews of
those who are assigned CJA
counsel, and other questions,
remain. More on Patreon here.
Now on June 14,
2021, Eduardo Vizcaino, one
and the same, was up for
sentencing before Judge
Richard M. Berman. Judge
Berman said he was surprised,
not that Vizcaino would want
to come into the US without
documentation, but that he
would engaged in these crimes,
again and again.
Eduardo Vizcaino
used his speech to speak about
conditions in jail, and to say
"Happy Father's Day."
Judge Berman
sentenced him to five years,
plus 14 months for the
violation of supervised
release. The case is US v.
Vizcaino, 20-cr-241 (Berman)
***
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