In
Sex Cult Case Larry Ray Opposing Severing
Isabella Pollok Who Gets No GPS So Amazon
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon Podcast
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SDNY COURTHOUSE,
Oct 19 – When Larry Ray was
arraigned on charges of sexual
exploitation, prostitution,
forced labor and money
laundering on February 12,
2020 he was wearing prison
blues and still had a Federal
Defender, but no financial
affidavit to have FD
appointed. Twitter theadette;
More on Patreon here.
On April
28, 2021, there was a
suppression hearing about his
arrest and questioning. Inner
City Press live tweeted it here
and below.
On
September 10, there was
another proceeding including
counsel for two Jane Does.
They would be allowed to
object at trial, under their
privilege (which the US
Attorney's Office cannot waive
for them - they mentioned one
John Doe, too). Reference was
made near the end to Ray
making an advise of counsel
defense, claiming that counsel
blessed his actions. Judge
Liman promised to rule quickly
on the motion to quash
subpoenas.
On September 20
Ray's Federal Defenders asked
Judge Liman for permission to
serve Rule 17(c) subpoenas for
medical records for John Doe 1
and Jane Doe 3.
On September 27,
Isabella Pollak moved for a
continuance (delay) or for
severance, noting the third
team of lawyers and this
volume of discovery: 516,169
images, 1,462 documents, 1043
spreadsheets, 320 audio files,
256 video files and 277
internet files.
On October 8, the
US Attorney's Office wrote to
Judge Liman that "the
Government objects to
adjourning the joint trial for
the lengthy period of time
requested by Pollok [but] does
not object to severing
Pollok's trial from Ray's,
keeping the trial of Ray
scheduled for February 2022
and scheduling Pollok's trial
for a later date."
But Ray opposes
severing Pollok's case. On
October 15 Pollok's Hastings
on Hudson-based lawyer
insisted on severance: "As
Judge Learned Hand succinctly
stated, '[n]o accused person
has any recognizable legal
interest in being tried with
another, accused with him.' US
v. Bronson, 145 F.2d 939, 943
(2d Cir. 1944 (L. Hand, J.)"
On October 18
Pollok's counsel wrote to
Judge Liman asking to modify
her conditions of release, so
she can work overtime at
Amazon, which no longer with
permit any electronic devices
(like GPS bracelets) on the
warehouse floor. The US
consents to this change.
And on October
19, Judge Liman granted the
requests: "MEMO ENDORSEMENT
granting [235] LETTER MOTION
filed by Isabella Pollok (2),
addressed to Judge Lewis J.
Liman from Attorney Jill R.
Shellow dated 10/18/2021 re:
Request to modify conditions
of pretrial release. I am
writing to request
respectfully two modifications
to Isabella Pollok's
conditions of pretrial
release: (1) Ms. Pollok has a
curfew from 9PM until 5AM. We
respectfully request that the
curfew condition be removed.
(2) Ms. Pollok wears a GPS
ankle bracelet. Accordingly,
we respectfully request that
the GPS bracelet condition be
removed. ENDORSEMENT: REQUEST
GRANTED. Bail modifications
approved. SO ORDERED. (Signed
by Judge Lewis J. Liman on
10/19/2021)."
But what about
Amazon barring any worker with
a GPS bracelet, under
pre-trial release (that is,
presumed innocent) from
working its warehouses? Watch
this site.
Back
on July 20, the US Attorney's Office
wrote to Judge Liman in support of non-party
Jane Doe's motion to quash Ray's subpoenas,
citing the psychotherapist - patient
privilege. The letter argues that "The Court
should reject the defendant's efforts to gain
access to information that his victims would
never have voluntarily disclosed to him had
they not be [sic] in his thrall."
Now on
August 18, Jane Doe through counsel has
opposed even "in camera" review of her records,
saying she and her counsel should
do the review. The US Attorney's
Office supports this, saying the
threshhold for in camera review
has not been met. Ray through
Federal Defenders disagrees. Watch
this site.
On May 26 in a
72-page Order Judge Liman
denied Ray's and Federal
Defenders' motions to dismiss,
addressing matters ranging
from the storage units to the
basis for the warrants,
including "Ray complains that
the CSLI Search Warrant
Affidavit omitted evidence
that called into question
FV1’s reliability as a
witness, including that: (1)
FV-1’s friends reported that
she “stretched the truth for
effect,” and “wanted to make
herself more exciting,” and
was the “best at [] telling
stories”; (2) FV-1 wrote in a
blog post that she would lie
to her parents and her
teachers; (3) in the same blog
post, FV-1 described Ray as a
“friend and a confidant,” and
FV-1 told friends that Ray was
a “good guy”; (4) FV-1 wrote
in an email to the dean of
Sarah Lawrence College stating
that she “made false
allegations to the police”
about Mr. Ray; (5) in 2015,
FV-1 testified under oath that
she had poisoned Ray, lied to
him and his daughter, and
later became his friend; (6)
FV-1 was arrested for
prostitution and told police
that she was not being
trafficked and told at least
one client the same thing.
Dkt. No. 137 at 11. Ray argues
that this information, which
was omitted from the CSLI
Search Warrant Affidavit,
would have undermined FV-1’s
statements and that without
FV-1’s statements, there was
insufficient probable cause
for investigators to obtain
Case 1:20-cr-00110-LJL
Document 184 Filed 05/26/21
Page 29 of 72 30 the
historical cell site
information. He thus argues
that the search warrant for
the cell site information must
be voided and the fruits of
the search excluded. The
argument lacks merit. As an
initial matter, Ray fails to
identify any material
information omitted from the
CSLI Search Warrant Affidavit.
To determine whether the
alleged misstatements or
omissions are material, the
Court must “disregard the
allegedly false statements”
and “insert the omitted
truths” and, after doing so,
“determine whether there
remains a residue of
independent and lawful
information sufficient to
support probable cause.”
Nejad, 436 F. Supp. 3d at 719
(internal citations omitted).
Where information is allegedly
omitted, the question is
whether the warrant, with the
addition of the omitted
information would still
support probable cause. See
Franks, 438 U.S. at 156;
United States v Canfield, 212
F.3d 713, 718 (2d Cir. 2000).
“If, after setting aside the
allegedly misleading
statements or omissions, the
affidavit, nonetheless,
presents sufficient
information to support a
finding of probable cause, the
district court need not
conduct a Franks hearing.”
Salameh, 152 F.3d at 113; see
also Ganek, 874 F.3d at 82
(“To determine whether a false
statement was necessary to a
finding of probable cause,
[the court] consider[s] a
hypothetical corrected
affidavit, produced by
deleting any alleged
misstatements from the
original warrant affidavit and
adding to it any relevant
omitted information.”).The
CSLI Search Warrant Affidavit
passes that test. The CSLI
Search Warrant Affidavit
contained detailed information
that FV-1 provided directly to
law enforcement." We'll
have more on this.
Back on
January 29, there was a
co-defendant who was indicted
and then released on bond:
Isabella Pollak. The next
indicted was unsealed and
Pollak was presented before
SDNY Magistrate Judge Debra C.
Freeman. She was released on
$100,000 bond and told, no
contact with victims.
On February 9
Judge Liman held Pollak's
arraignment and was told, at
the end, that she may not be
competent to stand trial.
Inner City Press live tweeted
it, here
and below.
On February
15 - President's Day -
Pollak's lawyers Peter M.
Skinner and Valecia J. Battle
of Boies Schiller Flexner
asked for a one-week extension
to pick a candidate to perform
a competency evaluation of
Pollack. I
Now on February
23, the parties have proposed
Dr. James L. Knoll, M.D., to
be paid with DOJ funds under
18 USC 4272(b), to report in
45 days. Inner City Press will
continue to follow this.
The September 4
thread:
Judge Liman says
due to COVID pandemic and
difficulties of Federal
Defenders meeting with Ray,
he's prepared to postpone
trial past January 19. Also
today: A request to release
Ray on bail, to help prepare
his defense.
Judge
Liman: The defense has raised
serious concerns about Mr. Ray
having access to discovery.
For that reason, I'm going to
defer ruling on release
request until I hear and
perhaps rule on issues of
early disclosure of Brady and
witness list and the like.
Federal
Defender Lenox: Our request as
to the sensitive materials,
we're not asking the court to
rule piece by piece. There's
only a small percentage in
dispute. We are proposing a
mechanism to rule on those so
Mr Ray can see it if he stays
in custody
FD: We agree that
nude videos are sensitive. But
we would ask the court to
review handwritten
confessions. These things are
exculpatory.
[Note: FD
wants to use sealing of
evidence as way to get Ray out
of jail. Press has asked to
UNseal the evidence - which
would also take this "Free
Larry Ray" argument off the
table.]
The case is US v.
Ray, 20-cr-110 (Liman).
***
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