In Avenatti Stormy Trial Lawyer Dean
Steward Drops Out In Notice To SDNY Judge
Furman
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Thread
Song
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SDNY COURTHOUSE,
Feb 22 – In the countdown of
the US v. Michael Avenatti
Nike extortion trial, before
the upcoming Stormy Daniels
trial, on February 10 the
charging conference was held,
until 7:10 pm. See Patreon here.
On February
14 Avenatti was found guilty
on all three counts, and his
sentencing was set for June 17
at 4 pm.
Now on
Saturday February 22, in
Avenatti's Stormy Daniels case
his lawyer H. Dean Steward has
on Saturday, February 22 filed
a notice of withdrawal. The
next hearing is this coming
week; Inner City Press has
timely requested the right to
live-tweet it. Watch this
site.
Some
wondered if Nike would be
putting out a gloating
statement, even though the
company was said at trial to
still face an SEC
investigation. Given the
evidence about Nike officials
Carlton Debose and Jamal James
arranging structured cash
payments of $10,000 to the
mother of DeAndre Ayton, it
seems more action is
necessary. But this is today's
action: Michael Avenatti,
guilty on all counts. More on
Patreon here.
Back on
February 12, after the reading
of a slightly tweaked jury
charge, the jury got the case
to deliberate. On February 13,
the jury asked a number of
questions, some of which Judge
Paul G. Gardephe expressed
frustration at. He told the
jury they could leave for the
day but to clarify one of its
questions, about recording(s)
of the March 21 meeting
involving Avenatti. Video of
that meeting here.
Another
question had a simple answer.
Is a filing of a lawsuit
request in order to reach a
settlement agreement? The
answer was and is No. Day's
live-tweeted thread here.
More on Patreon here.
Here's
audio of a question and answer
Inner City Press did on the
evening of February 12 with
ESPN Louisville, here.
More
on Patreon here.
The day before on
February 12 the jurors emerged
in late afternoon to request
to hear one of the Avenatti
phone calls (Inner City Press
has put them on Soundcloud here
and here
and a song here),
and requesting text messages
between Gary Franklin and
Jeffrey Auerbach.
More on Patreon here.
On
February 11, over hours, the
closing arguments were held.
Inner City Press live-tweeted
them, in 96 installments, here.
Assistant
US Attorney Matthew Podolsky
led off with the now famous
"have you held the clients
balls in your hands" audio,
and went on from there.
Avenatti's
lawyer Scott Srebnick covered
the case focusing on the
desired and goals of client
Gary Franklin and his
consultant Jeffrey Auerbach.
His brother
Howard Srebnick followed with
the case from the perspective
of Avenatti in New York,
saying he was carring out
Franklin's stated desire to
"light the fuse" for justice.
AUSA
Daniel Richenthal derided that
narrative, and told the jury
it didn't matter that Mark
Geragos, much less Nike, were
not charged. More on Patreon here.
The
case is US v. Avenatti,
19-cr-373 (Gardephe).
***
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