Ari Teman
Says His Lawyer May Have Spied For SDNY,
But To Declare Or Not Declare
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon
BBC
- Guardian
UK - Honduras
- ESPN
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
July 14– Ari Teman, raising
prosecutorial misconduct up to
the day of his then-scheduled
sentencing on December 1, 2020
learned on that day that his
defense lawyer is married to a
prosecutor. Now he has
formally requested the return
of his retainer and
restitution, see below.
U.S.
District Court for the
Southern District of New York
Judge Paul A. Engelmayer held
the December 1, 2020
proceeding. Inner City Press
covered and tweeted it, below.
On July 9,
2021, Judge Engelmayer held
another proceeding, and Inner
City Press again covered it.
Judge Engelmayer denied a
motion that he recuse himself,
based on Bank of America's
role and Berkshire Hathaway's
stake in BofA. We may return
to that, and to a "Jake Green"
filing the Judge Engelmayer
cited. For this, this: "bench
decision denying the defense's
motions for vacatur of the
defendant's convictions, for a
new trial, and for the Court's
recusal... The Court also set
the following schedule:
Sentencing is scheduled for
July 28, 2021 at 1:00
pm... By Tuesday, July
13, 2021, defense counsel is
to file an affidavit
identifying with specificity
any concrete respects in which
the defendants legal interests
in this case have been injured
by the fact that, for a brief
period after trial, he was
represented by, among others,
an attorney married to an
Assistant United States
Attorney."
Now, this: "ORDER
as to Ari Teman. The Court has
received an email from defense
counsel Susan G. Kellman,
Esq., notifying the Court
that, in response to the
Court's directive, see Dkt.
240, that defense counsel file
by July 13, 2021 a declaration
identifying any concrete legal
interest(s) of the defendant
that were injured as the
result of his brief
post-conviction representation
by Sher Tremonte LLP, the
defense will not be submitting
such a declaration (Signed by
Judge Paul A. Engelmayer on
7/14/21)."
From December 1,
2020: From the first moment,
Judge Engelmayer said he would
not be imposing sentence in
the proceeding. He expressed
amazement that the conflict
wasn't disclosed to him,
particularly by the
prosecutors usually so fast to
request so-calls Curcio
hearings. He discovered it as
he prepared remarks about
having known the lawyer.
But a
simple Internet search finds
that defense lawyer Noam
Korati Biale of Sher Tremonte
LLP is married to Margaret
Graham, who appears working an
SDNY prosecutor in press
releases.
Teman
added that Biale and Sher
Tremonte were specifically
retained to work on Brady
disclosure issues, citing US
v. Nejad, US v. Ahuja and
other cases covered by Inner
City Press.
He also noted
that since people are working
at home, it is more possible
for spouses to overhear each
other's work.
So sentencing was
adjourned, as were the Bank of
America issues Inner City
Press covered earlier in the
day, here.
Now on January
28, this: "ORDER as to Ari
Teman: The sentencing hearing
for defendant Ari Teman was
scheduled for December 1,
2020, but was terminated
shortly after it began after
the Court identified the need
for a Curcio hearing in order
to permit Sher Tremonte LLP,
which had recently appeared on
Mr. Teman's behalf,
torepresent him alongside
trial counsel. The Court has
since granted a series of
adjournments to enable Mr.
Teman to secure alternative
post-trial counsel. Yesterday,
notices of appearance for Mr.
Teman were filed by Susan G.
Kellman, Esq., and Andrew J.
Frisch, Esq. See Dkts. 199,
200. The Court welcomes new
counsel, for whom the Court
has great esteem. Although the
sentencing record otherwise
appears complete, the Court,
before setting a new
sentencing date, would benefit
from receiving letter
submissions from counsel
addressing the following
discrete points: 1. Bail
pending appeal: The Court
wishes to reach a
determination, before imposing
sentence, on whether it will
grant bail pending appeal.
That is because the Court
regards it as relevant to the
reasonable and proper sentence
under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)
whether Mr. Teman is likely to
be incarcerated at a time when
the restrictive and difficult
conditions attendant to the
COVID-19 pandemic remain in
place. In numerous cases
involving defendants who
either have been in custody
since March 2020 and/or who
have been about to enter
custody, the Court has imposed
a shorter sentence than it
otherwise would have, in
recognition of the heightened
rigors of custody during the
pandemic. That factor would be
present were Mr. Teman to
commence serving his sentence
not long after the upcoming
sentencing, but would not
clearly be so were the Court
to grant bail pending appeal.
The Court therefore solicits
counsels' views on whether Mr.
Teman qualifies for bail
pending appeal. See 18 U.S.C.
§ 3143(b); United States v.
Randell, 761 F.2d 122
(1985).2. Restitution and
forfeiture: On the eve of the
December 1, 2020 sentencing,
the Government submitted
evidentiary materials in
support of a proposed
forfeiture order that, had Mr.
Teman's representation issue
not arisen, independently
would have required an
adjournment. The Court wishes
to resolve, in an orderly
fashion, what the appropriate
restitution order is, and
whetherand if so, on what
termsa forfeiture order is
also warranted, as the
Government has urged. The
Court therefore solicits
counsels' views as to whether
and on what terms restitution
and/or forfeiture orders are
merited. The Court accordingly
sets the following schedule:
By Friday, February 12, 2021,
the defense is to submit a
memorandum setting out its
views on bail pending appeal,
and the Government is to
submit a memorandum setting
out its views on restitution
and forfeiture, attaching
proposed such orders and
evidentiary material
supporting the monetary
calculations in those orders.
By Friday, February 26, 2021,
the Government is to respond
to the defense's memorandum as
to bail pending appeal, and
the defense is to respond to
the Government's memorandum as
to forfeiture and restitution.
The Court does not invite
replies to these submissions.
(Signed by Judge Paul A.
Engelmayer on 1/28/2021)"
If a
defendant with retained
counsel runs into a conflict
like this, and can't get
retainer returned, how to
secure substitute counsel?
Watch this site.
The case is US v.
Teman, 19-cr-696 (Engelmayer)
***
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