Amid Coronavirus #6ix9ine Released By
Judge Engelmayer Now Faheem Walters Asks Out
of MCC
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon Thread Scope
BBC
- Guardian
UK - Honduras
- Vulture
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
April 14 – Daniel Hernandez
a/k/a Tekashi 6ix9ine was
sentenced to 24 months of
total imprisonment on December
18 in a proceeding live
tweeted by Inner City
Press before U.S. District
Court Judge Paul A.
Engelmayer.
6ix9ine was ordered released
by an Order that at the US'
request Judge Engelmayer
withheld until 4 pm on April
2, analyzed on Patreon here,
2-minute podcast here.
On April 14
6ix9ine's initial co-defendant
and bodyguard Faheem Walters
asked Judge Engelmayer for
compassionate release, more on
Patreon
here: "Dear Judge
Engelmayer: I am counsel to
defendant Faheem Walter in the
above captioned matter. Given
the extraordinary and
compelling circumstances
created by the ongoing
coronavirus pandemic and Mr.
Walter’s medical condition, I
respectfully move the court
pursuant to 18 U.S.C. §
3582(c)(1)(A) to reduce Mr.
Walter’s term of imprisonment
to time-served and impose a
term of supervised release
with the condition of home
confinement in lieu of his
unserved term of
imprisonment... On April 2,
2020, in accordance with 18
U.S.C. § 3582(c), I submitted
on behalf of Mr. Walter an
administrative request for
compassionate release to Marti
Licon-Vitale, the Warden of
the Metropolitan Correctional
Center in Manhattan (the
“MCC”), where Mr. Walter is
currently being housed...
"Mr. Walter
performed security for
co-defendant Daniel Hernandez
(Takeshi 69). In that role, he
took direction principally
from co-defendant Kifano
Jordan, among others. While
never a member of the Nine
Trey Gangster Bloods, because
of his close affiliation with
Hernandez, Jordan, and others
of his co-defendants, Mr.
Walter became an “associate”
of the gang, and was charged
by indictment with
participating in its
racketeering enterprise and
various actions in furtherance
thereof. Mr. Walter was
arrested on November 19, 2018
and charged by indictment with
racketeering conspiracy,
violent crimes in aid of
racketeering, and possessing
firearms in furtherance of
those crimes of violence. He
has remained continuously
incarcerated since his arrest.
On April 3, 2019, Mr. Walter
accepted responsibility to
Count 4 (18 U.S.C.
§1959(a)(6)), and the
lesser-included offense of
Count 5 (18 U.S.C.
§924(c)(1)(A)(i))) of the
indictment. Both counts
stemmed from Mr. Walter’s
participation in an April 3,
2018 robbery of a rival hip
hop artist in the entryway of
a building in midtown
Manhattan. Based on Mr.
Walter’s presentence
investigation report, his
stipulated Guidelines range
for Count 4 was 8 to 14
months’ imprisonment. Because
Count 5 had a mandatory
minimum term of 60 months’
imprisonment to run
consecutively to that term,
the total Guidelines Range was
68 to 74 months’ imprisonment.
On August 16,
2019, Your Honor sentenced Mr.
Walter to a belowGuidelines
prison term of 62 months, to
be followed by three years of
supervised release. Mr. Walter
has served 17 months of his
sentence. Shortly before his
arrest in this case, on
October 26, 2018, Mr. Walter
suffered a gunshot wound to
his abdomen. Mr. Walter was
admitted to New York
Presbyterian Hospital and
underwent life-saving surgery
where the bleeding was
stopped, and he was fitted
with a colostomy bag and
wafer. The surgeons were
forced to make an incision
from Mr. Walter’s collarbone
to his naval. Following
surgery, that wound was not
closed because of the risk of
infection. Mr. Walter remained
in the hospital until November
13, 2018. He was discharged to
his home where he was
scheduled to have a home
health aide to assist in
caring for his wound. Six days
later, on November 19, 2018,
Mr. Walter was arrested in
this case. After a twoday stay
at MDC Brooklyn, with an open
wound in his chest, Mr. Walter
was transported to Kingsbrook
Jewish Medical Center in
Brooklyn and admitted for
continued medical care.
On November 23,
2018, Mr. Walter was
transported to the hospital’s
inpatient rehabilitation
facility, where he was placed
on a wound-vac to help close
the wound in his chest. He
remained hospitalized there
until December 21, 2018, when
he was transported back to MDC
Brooklyn. Mr. Walter has used
a colostomy bag for the
entirety of his term of
incarceration. He has been
solely responsible for
maintaining and cleaning his
colostomy during his time at
MDC Brooklyn and MCC New York.
At both facilities he has had
limited access to medical
care, often going months
without being seen by a
doctor, and has often run
short on necessary medical
supplies for his colostomy.
When the power went out for
several days at the MDC, Mr.
Walter, who was locked in his
cell during the entire
duration of the power outage,
complained of blood in his
colostomy bag and requested
medical attention. His
requests fell on deaf ears and
were repeatedly ignored. After
being moved to the MCC
following his plea, conditions
have remained largely the
same. Only with the
intervention of counsel has
Mr. Walter received any
additional medical supplies or
been seen by a doctor. Despite
exceeding the recommended time
for use of the colostomy bag
at the time of his sentencing
eight months ago, Mr. Walter
has still heard nothing about
next steps from the BOP
medical staff about removal of
the colostomy. In the
meantime, he has remained at
MCC New York, where, because
of the colostomy, he continues
to face an increased risk of
infection and of serious
medical complications." Inner
City Press will cover this.
As to
previously freed co-defendant
Kintea McKenzie a/k/a Kooda B
the US Attorney's Office has
written: "At approximately
7:00 p.m. on March 31, the
defendant was released from
the MCC subject to the same
conditions of the defendant’s
pretrial release. On April 1,
2020 a member of the NYPD sent
a clip of a video posted to a
social media account that
appeared to depict the
defendant and several other
individuals partying at the
defendant’s residence shortly
after the defendant arrived
home. The individuals are
close together, and one of the
individuals appears to be
smoking a marijuana cigarette
and drinking an alcoholic
beverage. Discussion The
Court’s April 2 Order directed
the Government to set forth
the view of Pretrial Services
(“Pretrial”) in response to
the defendant’s actions.
Pretrial’s response is as
follows: Based on the
information received, Pretrial
Services believes that remand
is warranted in this case. The
defendant’s previous bail
conditions included “no
contact with any gang member.”
According to the NYPD, the
video in question was posted
by a known gang member. The
parties agreed, after learning
of the defendant’s quarantine
status in MCC, to modify the
defendant’s release conditions
to permit him to be released
immediately instead of waiting
for the quarantine period to
end. While placement on
location monitoring equipment
does not control who enters
the defendant’s residence, the
defendant’s failure to adhere
to social distancing
guidelines have and will
continue to alter the timeline
by which any location
monitoring conditions can be
effectively enforced. The
Court notified Mr. McKenzie
that it expects scrupulous
compliance with all conditions
of release. Pretrial Services
believes that the defendant
has demonstrated the opposite
and that his bail should be
revoked. The Government shares
Pretrial’s frustration with
the defendant’s conduct. The
defendant used his asthma
diagnosis in the midst of the
COVID-19 pandemic to seek
release from the MCC. As set
forth in the Government’s
opposition to the defendant’s
motion for bail, the
Government was skeptical of
the severity of the
defendant’s purported asthma
condition because, during his
July 12, 2019 interview with
the Probation Department, the
defendant did not report any
medical conditions nor did he
report taking any medication.
The defendant’s reckless
behavior immediately following
his release put himself and
others at danger and
undermined the primary reason
supporting Court’s rationale
granting his release: to allow
the defendant to distance
himself from others in an
effort to avoid contracting
COVID-19.1 1
Pretrial’s recommendation for
remand relies in part on an
NYPD officer’s report to
Pretrial that the individual
who posted the video online is
a known gang member. At this
time, the Government does not
have sufficient information to
opine on whether the
individual posting the video
is a gang member."
On delaying
docketing of the order to free
#6ix9ine, AUSA Longyear wrote,
"Delayed docketing of the
Order will allow law
enforcement agents to ensure
that Mr. Hernandez is
transported safely and
securely from the facility
where he is currently housed
to a residential address
previously approved by the
Probation Department (the
“Residence”). The Government
will alert the Court as soon
as Mr. Hernandez has arrived
at the Residence, at which
time the Government will have
no objection to Order being
publicly filed. The Government
respectfully submits that
delayed docketing of the Order
for a short period of time
will ensure the safety of law
enforcement agents and Mr.
Hernandez upon his release
from custody. The Government
has consulted with Lance
Lazzaro, counsel for Mr.
Hernandez, who consents to
this request."
Inner City
Press reported, other others picked
up with credit, that on
March 22 Hernandez / 69's
lawyer Lance Lazzaro asked
Judge Engelmayer to order his
client released citing his
asthma and shortness of
breath, Coronavirus and the case
in the MDC in Brooklyn
(although 69 is it seems in
the private contractor GEO
facility in Queens, the
adherence to BOP protocol and
inclusion in its COVID-19
statistics is not clear).
On March
25 Judge Engelmayer issued a
ruling, denying the request
but instructing the Bureau of
Prisons what he would have
ruled, if he'd known of
Coronavirus. But Lazzaro
argued that his client is
structurally unable to request
relief for BOP, without the US
Attorney's Office consenting
in some way.
Now on the
evening of March 31 Inner City
Press can report that Lazzaro,
though another, made a final
plea to the BOP, which turned
him down:
From: "Shannon
Robbins" at bop.gov Subject:
Re: Daniel Hernadez #86335-054
Date: March 31, 2020 at
1:52:52 PM EDT To: "Elis
Pacheco"
Mr. Pacheco, Mr.
Hernandez is currently housed
at the GEO facility in the
custody of the US Marshals
Service. We do not have any
authority or oversight of his
case as he is not in a BOP
facility. If the Court orders
a compassionate release for
him, that information will be
provided to the US Marshals
Service and the GEO facility
for processing. I am hopeful
this information will be
helpful. Shannon Shannon
Robbins, Section Chief
Designation and Sentence
Computation Center 346 Marine
Forces Drive Grand Prairie,
Texas 75051
So Lazzaro
has renewed his appeal to
Judge Engelmayer: " BOP has
now denied Mr. Hernandez’s
administrative request for
compassionate release. As per
the attached e-mail dated
March 31, 2020, Section Chief
Shannon Robbins with
BOP’sDesignation and Sentence
Computation Center, Mr.
Hernandez’s administrative
request to BOP for
compassionate release was
denied because as a non-BOP
inmate, BOP is refusing to
grant Mr. Hernandez
compassionate release.
According to 18 U.S.C. §
3582(c), a court may, upon a
finding of extraordinary and
compelling circumstances,
reduce the prison term of a
defendant’s sentence if BOP
has denied compassionate
release after the defendant
has exhausted all
administrative remedies with
BOP. Accordingly, in this
case, your Honor now has the
statutory authority to modify
Mr. Hernandez’s sentence so as
to immediately release him
from prison."
Inner City Press
covered the trial
Hernandez testified at, and
the other sentencings
in the case and will continue
to. The case is US v.
Jones, 18-cr-834
(Engelmayer). More on Patreon
here.
***
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