In
Avenatti Stormy Case Financial Affidavit
Still Sealed But Inner City Press Raises
Correia Case
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon
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SDNY COURTHOUSE,
Nov 12 – When after three days
of jury selection the trial of
Michael Avenatti for allegedly
extorting Nike began on
January 29, Assistant US
Attorney Robert Sobelman told
the selected jurors that
Avenatti was supposed to look
out for the interests of his
client, but he did not - he
had a weapon, social
media. More on 1st day
on Patreon here.
On August 7
in the Stormy Daniels case,
Avenatti had motions heard by
U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York
Judge Jesse M. Furman. Inner
City Press live tweeted it, here.
On August
27, Inner City Press filed a
formal request that documents
in the case not be sealed,
full filing on Patreon here.
Now on
November 12, Inner City Press
has made a third filing with
Judge Furman, on a decision
to unseal issued earlier in
the day by SDNY Judge J. Paul
Oetken after Inner City Press
filed to similarly unseal Lev
Parnas' co-defendant David
Correia's financial info:
"Dear Judge
Furman:
Pursuant to this Court's
August 28, 2020 Order granting
leave to be heard, this is a
further argument and District
precedent for the unsealing of
the CJA Form 23, affidavit and
all associated documents in US
v. Avenatti, 19-cr-374
(JMF).
Today in US v. Parnas, Correia
et al., 19-cr-725, Judge J.
Paul Oetken in a nearly
identical case in which Inner
City Press also timely sought
unsealing has ordered that
David Correia's financial
declarations should be
unsealed in full and docketed
in five business days. See
19-cr-725, Dkt No 145 citing
Dkt No 123 ("letter filed by
Matthew Russell Lee advocating
for public access to these
declaration.")
Judge
Oetken cites
United States v. Smith, 985 F.
Supp. 2d 506, 517 (S.D.N.Y.
2013) (collecting cases) and
states "The Court sees
no reason why the declarations
at issue depart from judicial
documents associated with
criminal pretrial proceedings
as to which the Second Circuit
has previously recognized the
First Amendment right of
access.... Accordingly,
defense counsel’s request to
seal or redact the attorney
declarations is DENIED.
Counsel are directed to file
the unredacted declarations on
the public docket within five
business
days."
The same logic
obtains and should be applied
here, to the too-long filings
of Defendant
Avenatti.
Again, Inner City
Press which closely covers
SDNY criminal proceedings
noted in September that before
SDNY Magistrate Judge Barbara
Moses the financial situation
of defendant Jonathan Smith
was fully disclosed on the
record.
Similar
disclosures have been made,
even this week, in the SDNY
Magistrates Court under Judge
Freeman.
We again
ask, why should lower income
and less high profile
defendants in the SDNY -- and
now David Correia -- have
their financial information so
disclosed while Avenatti's
information is sealed in its
entirety?
The documents at issue should
not be sealed and should be
made available." Watch this
site.
On August
28 Judge Furman entered an
order: "The Court received the
attached communication from
Matthew Lee of Inner City
Press “seeking leave to be
heard and for the unsealing of
the CJA Form 23, affidavit,
and all associated documents”
relating to this litigation.
To the extent that Mr. Lee
(who is admitted to the bar of
the Southern District of New
York) seeks leave to be heard,
his application is GRANTED.
The Court reserves judgment on
the question of whether
Defendant’s CJA Form 23 and
related documents should be
unsealed. SO ORDERED. Dated:
August 28, 2020 New York, New
York JESSE M. FURMAN." Docket
No. 85, on Inner City Press'
DocumentCloud, here.
On November
10, with the Avenatti
submissions still sealed, he
appeared with "with attorneys
Robert Baum, Tamara Lila Giwa,
and Andrew John Dalack. AUSAs
Matthew Podolsky and Robert
Sobelman present. Court
reporter present. -- Pursuant
to Fed R. Crim. P. 5(f), the
Court reminded the Government
of its obligations under Brady
v. Maryland and its progeny.
-- Trial is scheduled for
April 21, 2021 and is expected
to last 2 weeks. Time is
excluded in the interests of
justice from November 11, 2020
until April 21, 2021. (ab)."
The above is the Order; others
reported the trial as April
26.
On
September 2 Federal Defenders,
rather than attempt to explain
why they routinely divulge and
put in the public record the
financial information of less
high profile and lower income
clients, stating in
Magistrates Court exactly how
much their clients make and
where they and even their
spouses work, has written in
this: "The defense
acknowledges that the Court
granted Matthew Lee, a
representative of “Inner City
Press,” leave to be heard on
this matter. The defense
requests leave to respond to
Mr. Lee one week from the
timely filing of any
substantive brief or letter.
For now, it bears emphasizing
that the Court’s measures
requiring the Federal
Defenders to keep an accurate
record of the hours spent on
Mr. Avenatti’s defense, and
also requiring Mr. Avenatti to
regularly update the Court on
his finances, are sufficient
to protect the public fisc and
to ensure that funds for
court-appointed counsel are
being properly spent. Further,
“neither the First Amendment
nor the common law provides a
right of access to financial
documents submitted with an
initial application to
demonstrate a defendant’s
eligibility for CJA
assistance.” In re Boston
Herald, Inc., 321 F.3d 174,
191 (1st Cir. 2003). And “even
if there were a common law
presumption of access, then it
would be outweighed here … by
[Avenatti’s] countervailing
privacy interests” and rights
under the Fifth and Sixth
Amendments. Id." Full
letter on Patreon here.
It is UNacceptable -- the
public's and press' right of
access is not limited to the
public fisc, it is based on
the FIRST Amendment.
Hearing
nothing more, but continuing
to closely cover all things
SDNY, on September 8 Inner
City Press filed again: "Re:
US v. Avenatti, 19-cr-374
(JMF) - Further on the need to
unseal CJA Form 23 and
associated documents including
affidavit
Dear Judge
Furman:
Pursuant to this Court's
August 28, 2020 Order granting
leave to be heard, and in
response to Federal Defenders'
September 2 (footnote)
response), this is a further
argument for the unsealing of
the CJA Form 23, affidavit and
all associated documents in US
v. Avenatti, 19-cr-374
(JMF).
Before
citing case law, Inner City
Press which closely covers
SDNY criminal proceedings
notes that just today, before
SDNY Magistrate Judge Barbara
Moses, the financial situation
of defendant Jonathan Smith
was fully disclosed on the
record.
To obtain CJA
counsel it was disclosed that
Mr. Smith of The Bronx
received $471 a week in
unemployment, and pays $150 to
$200 a month in child support
of each of his three children,
and $65 a month for cell phone
service. See, US v. Smith,
20-cr-317 (Swain /
Moses).
We again ask, why
should lower income and less
high profile defendants in the
SDNY have their financial
information so disclosed while
Avenatti's information is
sealed in its entirety?
Avenatti
in his other SDNY case, in
which he was convicted by a
jury, has requested another
adjournment of sentencing, to
December.
On
September 10, Federal
Defenders responded, saying
that the disclosure of the
Bronxite and Massachusetts
drug defendants'
information is somehow
different than for Avenatti,
who is apparently in their
view due great privacy and
protection. Then they threaten
to appeal if Judge Furman
rules for transparency: "RE:
United States v. Michael
Avenatti 19 Cr. 374 (JMF) Dear
Judge Furman: We write to
briefly respond to the letter
submitted on behalf of Inner
City Press by Matthew R. Lee
requesting the unsealing of
Michael Avenatti’s CJA 23 Form
and accompanying affidavit.
See Dkt. No. 90. Neither the
public nor the media have a
presumptive right to access
the financial documents of a
defendant who seeks
court-appointed counsel under
the Sixth Amendment. In re
Boston Herald, Inc., 321 F.3d
174, 191 (1st Cir. 2003)
(“[N]either the First
Amendment nor the common law
provides a right of access to
financial documents submitted
with an initial application to
demonstrate a defendant’s
eligibility for CJA
assistance.”). And as
discussed more thoroughly in
Mr. Avenatti’s previous
letters, any such common law
or First Amendment interest is
trumped by the real and
appreciable risk of
self-incrimination Mr.
Avenatti faces should his
sworn statements about his
financial condition be made
available to the government or
publicly.1 1 As set
forth in Mr. Avenatti’s reply
to the government’s response
in opposition to keeping his
sworn financial statements
sealed, the court in the
Central District of California
presiding over a different
case against him has sealed
Mr. Avenatti’s application for
court-appointed counsel under
Ninth Circuit precedent and
local rules. Accordingly, Mr.
Avenatti respectfully requests
that the Court stay any order
to unseal those same documents
in this case so that he may
pursue appropriate appellate
relief."
We'll have more
on this, once the situation
becomes clearer - it is not
clear if Inner City Press is
permitted to surreply to this.
It should not be necessary.
The courts should be
transparent, and defendants
should be treated equally.
And later the US
Attorney's Office said, " in
light of the presumption of
openness in criminal
proceedings and the approach
favored by the Second Circuit,
the defendant has failed to
provide a legally sufficient
basis for wholesale and
indefinite sealing of the CJA
23 Form and supporting
affidavit." Full letter on
Patreon here.
Now we await Avenatti's / his
Federal Defenders' reply.
Watch this site.
This case is US v. Avenatti, 19-cr-374
(Furman).
***
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