Trial
of Joel Tapia Ended With A Whimper Now He
Gets 188 Months, His Letter to Press Here
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon,
Periscope
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
July 7 – In the jury trial of
US v. Joel Tapia before U.S.
District Court for the
Southern District of New York
Judge Kimba M. Wood on June
19, 2019 the government showed
pages from the notebook of a
drug intermediary.
By June 24
after playing WhatsApp audio
and showing a Boost Mobile
account with a billing address
at their (T-Mobile for now)
headquarters in Lenexa,
Kansas, the government rested.
Tapia's lawyer Calvin H.
Scholar reserved his right to
make motions.
Only on
July 2, 2019 was this verdict
entered into the docket: "JURY
VERDICT as to Joel Tapia (5)
Guilty on Count 1sss; Not
Guilty on Count 2sss,3sss."
The U.S. Attorney's Office did
not issue any press release.
Now on
July 7, 2021, this: "JUDGMENT
IN A CRIMINAL CASE as to Joel
Tapia (5). The defendant was
found guilty on Count(s) 1sss
after a plea of not guilty.
All open counts are Dismissed.
IMPRISONMENT: 188 months.
SUPERVISED RELEASE: 5 years.
The court makes the following
recommendations to the Bureau
of Prisons: That the defendant
be incarcerated at Fort Dix,
or a facility as close to New
York City as possible. The
defendant is remanded to the
custody of the United States
Marshal. Assessment: $100.00
due immediately. (Signed by
Judge Kimba M. Wood on
7/7/21)."
Joel Tapia
sent a May 18, 2021 letter,
not visible in the docket; he
mailed it and a cover letter
to Inner City Press on June 5,
photo here.
Update here.
We aim to have more on this -
watch this site.
On June 25,
2019 Assistant US Attorney
Olga Zverovich in her closing
emphasized to the jury how
Joel Tapia tried to keep a
"clean" personal phone and a
separate TracPhone for
narcotics. She played audio of
Tapia yelling angrily when he
got a drug call on his
personal line.
Tapia's lawyer Calvin
Scholar, meanwhile, submitted
a detailed request to admit
into evidence the full
contents of a hard drive of
surveillance footage of 1428
Fteley Avenue in the Bronx
that law enforcement seized
from Tapia's auto body shop.
The request was accompanied by
a 13 page exhaustive list of
the many times Tapia's auto
body shop was mentioned in the
trial and in the proffer
sessions that preceded it. But
how to know when the jury
comes back?
On June 20
the June 19 witness continued
on the stand, testifying how
after he and his co-defendants
(the word seems to work in
Spanish, or at least
Spanglish) were arrested and
all in the MCC, some on
different floors, they were
able to speak together about
how to get eight kilos of
heroin out of a bathroom wall
in The Bronx.
The
government's agents, it seems,
had broken some of the
bathroom walls under a search
warrant, of the type never put
in PACER in the SDNY. A
co-defendant's mother said the
damage and fix up meant that
there was hot water in the
bathroom at last. But the
drugs weren't found.
To get the
drugs, the co-defendants all
went to Saturday church in the
MCC. They spoke though on
different floors though vents.
They smoked K-2 and took
another drug called Chinita.
All of
this was elicited by the
questioning of the Assistant
US Attorney, whose office is
right next to the MCC. The
drugs were recovered from the
wall; the witness said he
mostly smoked K-2 with his
co-defendants because he
didn't want them to know he
was already meeting with the
government. But now of course
they do. We'll have more on
this trial.
Back on
June 19: Who is Janet? The
prosecutor asked in English,
translated then into Spanish
and this answer: Un cliente, a
client. She bought cocaine, 50
grams, every 7 to 10 days.
Meanwhile the defendant's CJA
lawyer Calvin H. Scholar asked
Judge Wood to preclude the
government from presenting
certain exhibits, which Inner
City Press has requested. Back
on May 15 Scholar wrote that
telephone recordings 427, 448
and others up to 2949 are
"irrelevant under Fed. R.
Evid. 401."
There is
also the matter of "a firearm
in a Bronx apartment prior to
the arrest of Mr. Tapia. It is
important to note that Mr.
Tapia had no ties to that
apartment at the time the
Government recovered the
weapon. See ECF No. 171,
Transcript Order Status:
Pending."
Inner City
Press has asked the US
Attorney's Office for access
to the exhibits they are
presenting, in the otherwise
empty penthouse courtroom of
Judge Kimba Wood. Watch this
site, and @InnerCityPress
and @SDNYLIVE.
Judge Stein told
the jury not to read press
coverage about the case, while
predicting there would be no
press coverage of it. But why
then are there three separate
Assistant U.S. Attorneys on
the case, two marshals
shepherding Duncan in and out
of the courtroom even during
breaks, and rulings to keep
out information about the
lawyers and funding companies
behind this slip and fall
fraud scheme? Inner City Press
will continue to cover this
trial. More on Patreon, here.
The
case is U.S.
v. Bryan
Duncan, et al.,
18-cr-00289
(Stein).
***
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