Ex
Rep Chris Collins Got Pardon Now Cameron
Seeks Early End of 5 Years Probation
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Thread,
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SDNY COURTHOUSE,
June 10 – When former
Congressman Chris Collins came up for sentencing
on January 17, he and his
lawyers were ready with
arguments about the Boy
Scouts.
U.S. District
Court for the Southern
District of New York Judge
Vernon S. Broderick was ready
with a statement that he had
not considered Collins'
political views in imposing
sentence on him, ultimately 26
months in a prison camp in
Pensacola, Florida, to begin
on March 17. Hear Inner City
Press recap on WBEN Radio, here.
On
December 22, Collins received
a pardon.
Now on June 10,
2021, Cameron Collins has
asked Judge Broderick for an
early end of his five years of
probation, noting a his
settlement with the SEC and
that he "disgorged all of his
avoid [sic?] losses (plus
interest)." Is money enough?
The letter is dated June 1,
but was only docketed on June
10 in the afternoon, along
with a sealed document in the
vault. Watch this site.
In August,
as Collins pushed for a second
delay of surrender, Judge
Broderick invited a status
letter - and to his credit
docketed two constituents'
letter protesting delay. Sue
Perry, handwritten, says
"Enough is enough."
Christopher White, on a
computer, asks "Why Mr.
Collins is granted a delay in
his incarceration when other
prisoners of lesser means and
more medical risks are
currently actually in prison?"
Now on
October 1 Collins' lawyer have
filed an emergency motion to
again delay his report date,
from October 13 to December 8,
or for a "modification of
sentence" to home confinement.
They quote
Dr Anthony Fauci, and Vice
President Mike Pence (that
COVID cases will rise).
Ironically, they cite the case
of Ng Lap Seng, the United
Nations briber whom Judge
Broderick also sentenced Will
Judge Broderick seek
submissions from others? Watch
this site.
On March
2, Collins pushed his
surrender date back to
April 21, with Judge Broderick
"granting request that Collins
Report date be extended and
re-set to 2:00pm on April 21,
2020."
On April
1, Collins asked for another
extension, citing Coronavirus
COVID-19, and at 9:13 am on
April 2 he got it: ": MEMO
ENDORSEMENT as to Christopher
Collins (1) granting [184]
LETTER MOTION addressed to
Judge Vernon S. Broderick from
Jonathan B. New dated April 1,
2020 re: Extended
Self-Surrender Date.
ENDORSEMENT: APPLICATION
GRANTED. SO ORDERED. (Signed
by Judge Vernon S. Broderick
on 4/1/2020) (ap)."
Here was
the request agreed to: "on
January 17, 2020, Mr. Collins
appeared before Your Honor for
sentencing pursuant to his
plea of guilty to one count of
conspiracy to commit
securities fraud and one count
of making a false statement.
At sentencing Your Honor, in
relevant part, sentenced Mr.
Collins to concurrent
sentences of 26 months
imprisonment, recommended that
Mr. Collins be designated to
FPC Pensacola in Florida and
set a Report Date of March 17,
2020. On January 31, 2020, a
Judgment in a Criminal Case
issued as to Mr. Collins, ECF
No. 171, formalizing this
sentence and recommending that
BOP designate FPC Pensacola if
possible. On February 28,
2020, Mr. Collins moved the
Court, with the Government’s
consent, to continue the
Report Date to April 21, 2020,
because Mr. Collins had not
yet been processed into the
BOP system, had not been
designated to a facility and
there was a concern that the
designation would not be able
to occur prior to March 17.
The Court granted the motion
to continue the Report Date to
April 21, 2020. Since the
filing of the last motion to
continue Mr. Collins’ Report
Date, the impact of the new
strain of coronavirus which
causes COVID-19 greatly
worsened, prompting the World
Health Organization, on March
11, 2020, to officially
classify COVID-19 as a
pandemic... we respectfully
request that Mr. Collins’
Report Date be extended and
re-set to 2:00 pm on June 23,
2020, for the reasons set
forth below. We have conferred
with counsel for the
Government, which does not
object to the relief requested
herein." And then? Inner
City Press will stay on these
cases.
On January
24, in sentencing tippee
Stephen Zarsky who was
directly tipped by the
ex-Congressman's son Cameron
Collins to whom he gave five
years probation, Judge
Broderick gave only four years
probation, no jail time. The
sentencing, in nearly empty
Courtroom 110 where phone use
was not permitted, leading to
a mere three tweet thread from
the hallway, was replete with
references to an undisclosed
disease of Zarsky's that led
him to communicate with people
in the "wee hours."
Zarsky's lawyer said "he is
not a politician... He is a
romantic poet, a songwriter,
he has a guitar
collection." When at
last it was Zarsky's own turn
to speak, he told Judge
Broderick he hopes the Judge
hears his songs one day.
How about this
one: Don't look for
justice in Foley Square.
OneCoin version here.
Or these Periscope videos, I &
II.
More on Patreon here.
We'll have more on and of
this.
As to
Cameron Collins' five years
probation, somewhat
defensively Judge Broderick
said that anyone questioning
his sentence could consider
the context.
Inner City
Press did its best to live
tweet that sentencing, here.
But to some, we are left with
the message that for example a
Bronxite who attempts to rob a
bank without a weapon of any
kind gets 151 months, and the
affluent son of a Congressman
who essentially steals
$500,000 gets no jail time.
Then
again, Francis Lorenzo who
bribed the United Nations then
testified against co-defendant
Ng Lap Seng got time served.
More on Patreon here.
Much of the
debate back on January 17
concerned whether Chris
Collins, when he told his son
Cameron about the setback for
Innate Immunotherapeutics,
could or should have told him,
"You can't trade on
this."
Another concerned
whether Collins recklessly
harmed his constituents by
actively running for office
when he knew or should have
known he likely could not
serve out the
term.
What made that
issue complex is that a
defendant has a right to
proclaim his innocence and
should not be punished for it.
But to attack the opposing
candidate?
Collins said he
did not want to return to
Buffalo. Judge Broderick after
imposing sentence urged him to
do so.
Watch this
site - and the @InnerCityPress
Twitter feed, podcast
and Patreon
site. In fact, more on
this Chris Collins story on
Patreon, here.
This case is US
v. Collins, et al., 18-cr-567
(Broderick)
***
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