Brady
Bribed Doctor To Buy and Distribute Oxy
Now Gets 36 Months In Prison From SDNY
Judge Crotty
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Exclusive Patreon
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
July 30 – Matthew
Ryan for three
years bribed a
Doctor Joseph
Olivieri to
issue unneeded
prescriptions
for oxycodone,
oxymorphone,
testosterone,
alprazolam and
nandrolone. On
July 30 he and
his lawyer
John S.
Wallenstein
argued to U.S.
District Court
for the Southern
District
of the New
York Judge
Paul A. Crotty
that
he is now in
recovery but
might revert
if put in
prison. The
guidelines
called for a
sentence
of 51 to 63
months; the US
Probation
Office
recommended 36
months.
Wallenstein went
further,
requesting
mere probation
and supervised
release,
giving as an
example that
Ryan would not
be able to
travel to
Florida on
weekends with
his friends -
absent Judge Crotty's
approval.
After hearing
the
arguments
Judge Crotty
read from a
statement he'd
seemingly
written in
advance - it
was not clear
if he made any
revision - and
accepted
Probation's
recommendation:
36 months in
prison.
Wallenstein asked
for Fort Dix and the
R-DAP
program, with
self surrender
on October 1
or within
seven days of
designation to
facility,
whichever is
earlier. The
Oxy wars
continues.
This case is USA
v. Brady,
18-cr-316
(PAC).
Wander Reyes
came to the US from
the Dominican
Republic three
years ago
and tried to
find work.
What he found,
and on July 30
was sentenced
to 30 months in
prison for,
was a
conspiracy to
try to rob 15
kilos of heroin
using, among
other things,
a fake police
car.
Before U.S.
District Court
for the Southern
District of
New York
Judge Gregory
H. Woods,
Wander Reyes emphasized
that he is
young and this
just sort of
happened.
Judge Woods, usually
moved by
defendant's
statements, took
issue with
this one.
These things
do not just
happened, he
said, mention zip
ties and fake
guns.
Assistant US
Attorney Celia
V. Woods added
an arrest of
Wander Reyes
for the rape
of a 12 year old.
Judge Woods
said there has
been no
conviction so
he would not
give that
weight. Wander Reyes'
defense
lawyer Zachary
Taylor argued
among other
things that
since Reyes
will in all
probability be
deported after
he serves his
time in US
prison, he
won't pose a
danger "to
Americans."
Still, even
while Judge
Woods said
he expects
an ICE
detainer to be
filed against
Wander
Reyes,
he imposed
three years of
supervised
release. Will
New York State
proceeding on the
rape of 12
year old
charge while
Wander Reyes is in
Federal
prison, or
wait? Or just
forget about it?
Inner City Press
will continue
to follow
these cases.
This case is USA v.
Wander Reyes,
19-cr-192
(GHW).
Back on
July 23 with
the courtroom
nearly full
for a mere
scheduling
proceeding for
Michael
Avenatti,
three stories
beneath a
man was
pleading
guilty and
agreeing to 87
months in
prison in an
nearly empty
courtroom.
There were
only Judge Naomi Reice
Buchwald and
her deputy,
one Assistant
US Attorney,
defendant
Polanco, his
interpreter
and his lawyer
- and Inner
City Press.
The allocution
was not as
smooth as it
might have
been.
Asked
to confirm
that he was
pleading guilty,
Mr. Polanco
said, "What
else can I
do?" This took
some
unwinding: you
could go to
trial.
He said
in Spanish, Tengo
que
ir a juico,
which means, I
have to go to
trial. But one
could also
translate it, I
have to be
brought to justice.
He sold
heroin and
fentanyl to an
undercover
agent. And on
November 5 at
the
same 2:30 pm
he will be
sentenced.
Inner City
Press will
stay on this
and other
cases in the
SDNY.
O
***
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