Michael
Cohen Tells SDNY Judge Of
Media Job and Book Editing
Needs
By Matthew
Russell Lee
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
Aug 5 – After Michael Cohen
received a three year sentence
in the US District Court for
the Southern District of New
York, then was released to
home confinement by the U.S.
Bureau of Prisons - then
remanded to Otisville. On that
there was a hearing by SDNY
Judge Alvin K. Hellerstein on
July 23, leading to Cohen's
re-release. Inner City Press
live tweeted it, below.
Now on August 5,
Cohen's counsel has filed
this: "Mr. Cohen has an
employment offer from a
political action committee to
provide consulting services
and media appearances. Mr.
Cohen understands that he may
not accept this, or any,
employment unless and until it
is pre-approved by the RRC. He
has provided the offer letter
and details to the RRC and is
awaiting its response. Second,
as the Court is also well
aware, Mr. Cohen plans to
publish a book in advance of
the 2020 presidential
election. In order to meet
this timetable, it is
necessary for Mr. Cohen to
engage in discussions with his
editor and publisher as
quickly as possible."
From July
23: Judge Hellerstein, to
AUSA: Once Mr. Cohen
questioned conditions,
you took it higher but never
responded, correct?
AUSA: Well, he
also questioned the location
monitoring, saying that's only
for more violent defendants.
Judge
Hellerstein: But you never
negotiated
AUSA: Mr Cohen
was viewed as combative. So
BOP decided-- Court Reporter:
Sorry, I got cut off and
didn't hear what AUSA Rovner
said, after violent.... Judge
Hellerstein: "Prisoners."
AUSA: BOP is not
required to given him a chance
to negotiate, in terms of home
confinement. Judge
Hellerstein: This was an
attorney's attempt to
negotiate an agreement. [Inner
City Press: Are day to day
defendants here in SDNY given
the chance to "negotiate"?
Hellerstein: He
was on furlough. He was
allowed to stay outside. Then
the New York Post article
comes out, and the BOP learns
he's writing a book, then
this. It's retaliation. [In
Pakula Declaration, Para 17a:
"Cohen asked [me to] say hello
to 'Mr Barr,'" the AG]
AUSA: This was
drafted in May for another
high profile inmate...
Judge Hellerstein: What was
the purpose of asking for no
social media? I've never seen
such a clause, in 21 years as
a judge. Have you? AUSA: I've
never seen a Federal Location
Monitoring agreement
AUSA Thomas
McKay: If I may-- Judge
Hellerstein: Can Ms. Rovner
not answer my questions? One
person speaks per side.
AUSA Rovner: Mr
Pakula was in a working group
for Federal Location
Monitoring, this had been
approved for high profile
inmates
Cohen's lawyer E.
Danya Perry: He should be able
to write his book. Judge
Hellerstein: If I grant this
injunction against
retaliation, he would still be
a prisoner in his home. He
shouldn't be able to hold a
press conference there. He
could post on social media
Perry: He
wants to edit and publish the
book. He wants to work,
subject to the approval of the
BOP, as appropriate. He should
be permitted to post in social
media. He obviously has
something to say of social
importance.
Danya
Perry: He wanted to know the
contours of the pre-approval
of religious practices. Does a
bris count? Can he visit his
rabbi? Perhaps he was being
over-lawyerly. Judge
Hellerstein: So he agrees to
conditions 2-8. How should
Number One be modified?
Judge
Hellerstein: Ms Rovner, could
you negotiate a new Condition
One? AUSA: I'd like a few
days. Judge Hellerstein: How
long should Mr Cohen be in
jail? If I find this
retaliatory... AUSA Rovner:
He's in quarantine right now.
Perry: He'll be picked up by
his son.
Judge
Hellerstein: I think that's
reasonable. He'll continue his
quarantine at home. He'd be
released tomorrow, after a
test today. AUSA Rovner: I
think that's reasonable, if
your Honor is inclined to
grant the injunction.
Perry: He's in
solitary. Judge Hellerstein:
He can survive one more day.
He should be released by 2 pm
tomorrow to his son. Does his
wife need to sign anything?
No.
Judge
Hellerstein: I find it was
retaliatory. He is released,
with Condition 1 to be
renegotiated
Earlier he had
been spotted dining al fresco
near Park Avenue at Le
Bilboquet (h/t NYP).
So will he
be remanded to jail, as was
requested for example for one
of Tekashi #6ix9ine's
co-defendants Kintea
McKinzie a/k/a Kooda
B (whose lawyer who
advised a guilty plea then
dropped him citing a conflict
of interest still sealed
despite Inner City Press opposition)?
The case
is US v. Cohen,
18-cr-602 and there is nothing
in the docket since March,
2020. Inner City Press is
monitoring it. Watch this
site.
On February 7,
2019 Judge William H. Pauley
III issued an order on how
much information gathered
during the investigation
should be made public.
Now on July 17,
Judge Pauley has denied the
government's attempt to
withhold, and ordered that it
be filed on the public docket
on July 18 at 11 am - an hour
and a half after fellow SDNY
Judge Richard M. Berman is set
to issue his Jeffrey Epstein
bond decision three stories
below. From Judge Pauley's
July 17 order: " On July 15,
2019, the Government submitted
a status report and proposed
redactions to the Materials ex
parte and under seal. The
Government now represents that
it has concluded the aspects
of its investigation that
justified the continued
sealing of the portions of the
Materials relating to Cohen’s
campaign finance violations.
Although the Government agrees
that the majority of the
campaign finance portions of
the Materials may be unsealed,
it requests limited redactions
to those portions to protect
third-party privacy
interests. After
reviewing the Government’s
status report and proposed
redactions, this Court denies
the Government’s request. In
particular—and in contrast to
the private nature of Cohen’s
business transactions—the
weighty public ramifications
of the conduct described in
the campaign finance portions
warrant disclosure. See United
States v. Amodeo, 71 F.3d
1044, 1051 (2d Cir. 1995)
(explaining that “financial
records of a wholly owned
business, family affairs,
illnesses, embarrassing
conduct with no public
ramifications, and similar
matters will weigh more
heavily against access than
conduct affecting a
substantial portion of the
public”). Moreover, the
involvement of most of the
relevant third-party actors is
now public knowledge,
undercutting the need for
continued secrecy. See United
States v. Basciano, 2010 WL
1685810, at *4 (E.D.N.Y. Apr.
23, 2010) (“Shielding third
parties from unwanted
attention arising from an
issue that is already public
knowledge is not a
sufficiently compelling reason
to justify withholding
judicial documents from public
scrutiny.”). On balance, the
“strong presumption of public
access” to search warrants and
search warrant materials under
the common law far outweighs
the weakened privacy interests
at play here. See Cohen, 366
F. Supp. 3d at 621-22
(collecting cases).
3 The campaign finance
violations discussed in the
Materials are a matter of
national importance. Now that
the Government’s investigation
into those violations has
concluded, it is time that
every American has an
opportunity to scrutinize the
Materials. Indeed, the common
law right of access—a right so
enshrined in our identity that
it “predate[s] even the
Constitution itself”—derives
from the public’s right to
“learn of, monitor, and
respond to the actions of
their representatives and
representative institutions.”
United States v. Erie Cty.,
763 F.3d 235, 238-39 (2d Cir.
2014). Accordingly, the
Government is directed to file
the July 15, 2019 status
report and the Materials on
the public docket on July 18,
2019 at 11:00 a.m." Watch this
site.
On February 20,
Judge Pauley has granted an
order pushing back Cohen's
date of surrender to prison
from March 6 to May 6, on the
basis of a "more fulsome
letter" submitted by his
lawyers on February 12 - under
seal.
While much
of the interest is in Cohen
and, behind him, President
Donald Trump, Pauley's order
addresses the need for public
oversight of Federal
authorities including judges.
From the SDNY decision in U.S.
v. Cohen, 18-cr-00602: "the
presumption of access is at
its core tethered to the need
for public monitoring of the
federal courts and their
exercise of judicial power.
Cf. SEC v. Van Waeyenberghe,
990 F.2d 845, 847 (5th Cir.
1993) (explaining that “[t]he
public’s right to information
does not protect the same
interests that the right of
access is designed to
protect”). As the Second
Circuit explained, Monitoring
both provides judges with
critical views of their work
and deters arbitrary judicial
behavior. Without monitoring,
moreover, the public could
have no confidence in the
conscientiousness,
reasonableness, or honesty of
judicial proceedings. Such
monitoring is not possible
without access to testimony
and documents that are used in
the performance of Article III
functions. Amodeo II, 71 F.3d
at 1050." While a fine basis,
this would militate not only
for the release of search
warrant records but more
transparency and accessibilty
day to day in the courts,
something lacking even the day
before in the presentment of Afghan
national Haji
Abdul Sattar
Barakzai a/k/a
Manaf for
allegedly
supporting the
Taliban with
heroin imports
and sales,
click here
for that.
Judge Pauley's February 7
order provides, "The
Government is directed to
submit a sealed, ex parte copy
of the Materials by February
28, 2019 with proposed
redactions in highlights
consistent with this Opinion
& Order. After reviewing
the proposed redactions, this
Court will direct the
Government to file the
redacted Materials on the
public docket in this action."
Previously from outside the
Court in the Cohen case on
December 12 surrounded by a
sea of cameras and tripods,
Inner City Press
live-streamed: see Periscope
broadcasts here
and here.
A week before that in
Courtroom 12A there was a guilty
verdict in the UN
bribery trial...
More
here
***
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 2006-2019 Inner City
Press, Inc. To request reprint or other
permission, e-contact Editorial [at]
innercitypress.com for
|