Avenatti Alleges Vindictive
Prosecution in SDNY Stormy Daniels Case Set
for April 21 Trial
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon,
thread
video
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
Oct 7 – Michael Avenatti in
the Stormy Daniels case
against him intends to file a
motion alleging vindictive
prosecution by November 12, it
emerged on October 7.
U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York Judge
Deborah A.
Batts asked
Avenatti's
lawyer who he
was claiming
is being
vindictive.
The response
began with
Donald Trump,
then named
Attorney
General
William Barr
as Trump's
"lapdog."
Judge Batts
questioned
whether this
indictment of
Avenatti was
filed before
Barr became
Attorney
General.
Judge Batts
set the trial
date for April
21, and
excluded time
under the
Speedy Trials
Act through
the date.
Inner City
Press will
continue to
cover this
case, and the
(Nike) case
before Judge Paul
G. Gardephe.
Back in August
Judge Gardephe
told
Avenatti's
lawyer in
that case
Scott A.
Srebnick to
"tee up the
subpoena
issues sooner
rather than
later." That
ball has not,
in fact, been
put on the
tee.
Srebnick
as in his
written
submissions
brought up the
Fifth
Amendment.
Judge Gardephe
said raising
that to a jury
would be a
first for him,
and that
Srebnick faces
a uphill
battle
convincing
him. But it
seems Srebnick
will try. He
took up 85% of
the speaking
time (Inner
City Press
live tweeted
it here),
in a courtroom
whose gallery
was less than
half filled.
Things have
changed.
Srebnick
proposed
moving the
trial from
November to
January, then
mentioned that
AUSA
Richenthal has
a trial
starting on
January 21, so
why not extend
further? More
on Patreon here.
Inner
City Press
will cover the
letters when
they come in,
and the Rule
17 issues, the
Fifth
Amendment and
Judge Gardephe's
and others'
SDNY cases.
Watch this
site.
Back on June 18
when Avenatti phoned in to the
prior status conference in the
Nike extortion case against
him, he said nothing other
than confirming he was on the
line and has no scheduling
conflict for the trial
scheduled for November 12.
Srebnick
told
Judge Gardephe
in June that
the trial
might have to
be delayed
because
Avenatti's law
firm's server
has still not
been reviewed.
He said it is
in the
possession of
the U.S.
Attorney's
Office for the
Central
District of
California.
SDNY Assistant
US Attorney
Podolsky said
that he has
not seen the
server,
either. Don't
these US
Attorney's
Office, both
part of the US
Justice
Department,
work together?
Or do they
mostly
compete?
Across Pearl
Street at the
courtroom of
SDNY Judge
Batts, which
Avenatti was
to have
appeared at
10:30 am, a
signed on the
door said that
the conference
has been
adjourned
until July 23.
(Srebnick says
it is "to
allow for new
counsel in
that case to
enter his
appearance and
begin
reviewing the
discovery.")
Instead Judge
Batts was
taking a
surreal and
halting guilty
plea, with
Inner City
Press the only
media in that
large
courtroom, of
Defendant
Augustin
Zamora-Vega
who could not
remember where
in the SDNY he
had
transported
drugs.
Avenatti if
nothing else
knows his way
around the
system. So
beyond the
motion
schedule --
August 19 for
Srebnick,
September 19
for Podolsky
and Richenthal
with an
October 3
reply --
whether this
trial actually
starts the day
after
Veteran's Day
is anybody's
guess. See
@InnerCityPress
and the news
@SDNYLIVE.
Back at his in
person arraignment on the Nike
extortion charges against him
on May 28, Judge Gardephe asked
him about each
of the
charges, How
do you plead?
"One hundred
percent not
guilty,"
Avenatti
answered four
times,
something he
expanded
slightly on in
a
question-less
press gaggle
in Foley
Square just
after the
proceeding.
Periscope
video here.
Alamy photos here.
Judge
Gardephe began
by disclosing
that Assistant
U.S. Attorney
Robert B.
Sobelman had
been an intern
of his while
in law school.
Judge Gardephe
said this
would have no
effect. He
asked AUSA Matthew
Podolsky
when the
discovery
material would
begin to be
produced.
As soon as
Avenatti's
lawyer Scott
Srebnick signs
a protective
order and
provides a thumb drive, was
the answer. It
seems it will
be a disk. Judge
Gardephe set
the next
conference for
June 18 at noon,
an hour an a half
after Avenatti
and some
lawyer are set
to appear
before SDNY
Judge Deborah
Batts in the
Stormy Daniels
case.
Earlier
on May 28
before Judge
Batts, Avenatti's
first move was
to have his
Miami-based lawyer
Srebnick ask
to transfer
the Daniels
case to California.
The U.S. Attorney for
the SDNY's office
opposed the request, saying
it met none of
the Supreme
Court's factors
for change in
venue in the
1964 case Platt
v. Minnesota
Mining &
Mfg. Co.,
376 U.S.
240. Attorney
Srebnick's
motion to make
a motion was
denied.
[Assistant
U.S. Attorney
Matthew Podolsky
told Judge Batts
he had
recently
beaten back a
similar
attempt to
delay by
bifurcated
venue motions.
For more,
see Patreon, here.]
***
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