After Ernest Murphy Got
260 Months Burgess Wants More Law Library
Time for Fatico Hearing
By Matthew
Russell Lee, @SDNYLIVE
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
Sept 6 -- A jury returned
guilty verdicts on drugs and
gun charges on August 20, 2019
against Ernest Murphy, one of
15 defendants in a
Brooklyn-based narcotics
conspiracy case brought by the
U.S. Attorney for the Southern
District of New York. Now a
co-defendants sentencing is
asked to be delayed two months
due to Coronavirus and the
Bureau of Prisons' response,
see below.
It
came after some electronic and
laboratory evidence was
suppressed by Circuit Judge
Richard J. Sullivan, who
rather than re-assigning has
kept many of his criminal
cases in the SDNY.
Now in
September 2020, this has been
sent to Judge Sullivan: "Re:
USA v. Burgess et al.,
(Tyshawn Burgess) 18 Cr.
373(RJS) Dear Judge Sullivan:
I am appointed counsel for
Tyshawn Burgess, and Sam Coe
is appointed co-counsel,
pursuant to the Criminal
Justice Act (CJA). Currently,
Mr. Burgess is scheduled for a
Fatico hearing on October 15,
2020. As the Court is aware,
this is a complex matter with
voluminous discovery relevant
to the upcoming hearing. My
understanding is that Mr.
Burgess is only permitted to
view discovery for one hour at
a time at the Westchester
County Jail, which makes his
participation in his own
defense difficult as the
hearing approaches. We are
requesting that the Court
direct the Westchester County
Department of Correction to
allow Mr. Burgess to review
the discovery in his case for
at least two-hour blocks of
time, to the extent
practicable, between now and
the date of the hearing. Mr.
Coe has contacted two of the
assistant wardens of the jail
regarding this issue, as
directed by a jail supervisor,
and has not yet received a
response." Watch this site.
On March 3
Burgess came up for sentencing
and Inner City Press which
alone covered the trial went
to cover it. But the
sentencing was postponed for
this Fatico hearing. Before he
adjourned it, Judge Sullivan
told Burgess in his orange
WCDOC shirt that others in the
case, he says given serious
time: Bayer 108 months, Felix
160 months, Robinson 126
months, Murphy himself 260
months (see below), Wilson 180
months.
But now
there will be a Fatico
hearing, and Inner City Press
hopes to be there. Judge
Sullivan is right that
transparency is important, and
it is appreciated. Here's the
Minute Entry: "proceedings
held before Judge Richard J.
Sullivan: Status
conference/Sentencing held on
3/3/2020. Defendant, in
custody, present with
attorneys Lorraine Gauli-Rufo
and Samuel Coe. AUSA Karin
Portlock present with Brittany
Raffa (ATF) and James Miles
(NYPD Det.) Court reporter
present. The Court adjourned
the sentencing and ordered the
parties to appear for a Fatico
hearing. The Court ordered the
government to submit a letter
no later than Wednesday, March
10, 2020, advising the Court
of counsel's availability for
such hearing, the government's
expected witnesses and
exhibits, and whether any of
Defendant's co-defendants
require the Court to resolve
similar disputes. The Court
will set a date for the Fatico
hearing by separate order. "
Watch this site.
Back on
February 13, 2020, Judge
Sullivan sentenced Ernest
Murphy. In the gallery of his
mobile courtroom now 11B were
six Murphy supporters, and
independent Inner City Press.
Judge Sullivan was rigorous,
demanding that Assistant US
Attorney Matthew Hellman
justify his count of weight of
heroin and of crack.
In a two
hour proceeding, Sullivan
sentenced Ernest Murphy to 260
in prison: 200 months on Count
1 (lower than the government
requested), and 60 more months
to run consecutive on Count 2.
Judge Sullivan urged Murphy to
get R-DAP drug rehab and job
training and warned his "iPad
and laptop" may be searched --
all this in more than 20 years
when he gets out. What will be
the technology then? Inner
City Press will stay on this.
Murphy's
two Criminal Justice Act
lawyers, Patrick Joyce and
Robert Moore, present again on
February 13, had complained to
Judge Sullivan on the eve of
trial that they had only then
been given 16 gigabytes of
audio and video recordings and
lab tests on crack cocaine.
Rather
than delay the trial, Judge
Sullivan ordered much of it
suppressed. During the five
day trial the government still
had a number of NYPD lab
technicians testimony, and
played wiretaps of cell phone
calls and calls from Riker's
Island, whose location in The
Bronx was cited as a basis for
venue in the SDNY.
In the
intercepted calls, there was
discussion of cooking,
packaging and selling crack
cocaine. Several times
reference was made to bringing
firearms to protect turf. A
government slang expert
witness said that "Shaquille"
jersey meant .32 caliber
pistol.
After the
jury got the case, they asked
to examine the drugs. Judge
Sullivan declined to send the
crack and ecstacy pills into
the jury room. Instead the
juror came out and passed them
hand to hand, in evidence
bags, in the jury box.
On the
second day of deliberations
the jury through the Court
Security Officer passed a note
that they wanted all audio
recordings and transcripts.
Judge Sullivan sent them in a
thumb drive and three binders,
as well as a menu to order
lunch.
But barely
an hour later, the jury
returned with its guilty
verdicts. The case is US
v. Ernest Murphy,
18-cr-373 (Sullivan).
***
Your
support means a lot. As little as $5 a month
helps keep us going and grants you access to
exclusive bonus material on our Patreon
page. Click
here to become a patron.
Feedback:
Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
Box 20047, Dag Hammarskjold
Station NY NY 10017
Reporter's mobile (and weekends):
718-716-3540
Other, earlier Inner City Press are
listed here,
and some are available in the ProQuest
service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
Copyright 2006-2020 Inner City
Press, Inc. To request reprint or other
permission, e-contact Editorial [at]
innercitypress.com for
|