Avenatti
Gets 30 Months in Nike Extortion Case As
He Seek to Bar Press from Stormy Sidebars
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon
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Radio
BBC
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SDNY COURTHOUSE,
July 8 – When after three days
of jury selection the trial of
Michael Avenatti for allegedly
extorting Nike began on
January 29, 2020 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 on
Patreon here.
Now on July 8,
2021, Avenatti has been
sentenced to 30 months in the
Nike case, while still seeking
to ban the Press from voir
dire jury selection sidebars
at his upcoming Stormy Daniels
trial, which Inner City Press
has opposed, see below. Inner
City Press live tweeted the
July 8 sentencing, here
and below (podcast here)
Sentencing is
getting a late start, as they
moved people out of Judge
Gardephe's courtroom,
seemingly to make way for more
SDNY prosecutors to squeeze in
to watch. Three AUSAs at front
table. Avenatti at the defense
table behind.
Avenatti
puts on glasses, fidgets with
pen, glances over legal pad in
front of him. As at all
sentences, he'll be given his
chance to speak, before Judge
Gardephe passes sentence.
Avenatti leans
over and whispers into ear of
his lawyer Srebnick. In other
SDNY courtrooms, they tell the
defendant to only speak with
his or her lawyer by in-house
phone, citing COVID. All
rise!
The AUSAs
introduce themselves - and
their paralegal. And FBI
agent. For Avenatti, two
lawyers: Scott Srebnick and
Danya Perry. Judge Gardephe
reads out the Rule 5(f) "Due
Process Protection Act"
script. US says it's in
compliance.
Judge Gardephe:
In preparation for sentencing,
I have read the government's
and defense's submissions. Ms
Perry, will you be speaking?
Perry: Mr.
Srebnick will be addressing
the pre-sentencing report.
Judge Gardephe: So I'll ask
him: any objections to the
report? Inner City Press
@innercitypress · 1h Srebnick:
We raised to Probation, we
disputed the evidence at
trial. But we understand the
jury has spoken. We are
prepared to proceed. Judge
Gardephe: There were a couple
of typos - the phrase reads
"counts also object" when it
should read, "Counsel also
object."
Judge Gardephe: A
jury convicted Mr. Avenatti.
Under the sentencing
guidelines grouping rules,
counts 1 and 2 were grouped
because the same victim. Count
3 has a different victim, Gary
Franklin. Mr. Avenatti does
not agree. Inner City Press
@innercitypress · 1h Judge
Gardephe: Here, as my jury
instructions made clear, there
was a close relation between
the extortion and honest
services fraud conduct.
There's Avenatti's demand that
he be hired to conduct an
internal investigation... and
his breach of duty to Mr.
Franklin
Judge Gardephe:
The Probation Department
applied the enhancement
because Mr. Avenatti abused a
position of trust... I will
group all three counts
together to calculate the
guidelines level. Extortion is
the highest: the base level is
9, 20 levels are added
Judge Gardephe:
Mr. Avenatti objects, saying
the cost of an internal
investigation should be
subtracted. His argument is
not persuasive. Nike has
already performed an internal
investigation. And Mr.
Avenatti was not qualified to
do one - he had a conflict
Judge Gardephe:
There was ample evidence Mr.
Avenatti had no genuine
interest in performing an
internal investigation. His
objections are overruled. 2
levels are added for abuse of
trust. Offense level is 31. No
criminal history. Guideline is
108 to 135 months
Judge
Gardephe: Ms. Perry, I'll hear
from you as to an appropriate
sentence. Ms. Perry: I know
that you've read the letters
that've been submitted. He
feels he's brought enough
shame to his parent, and pain-
he faced challenges growing
up. He's always worked hard.
Perry: He
wanted to be the David
fighting Goliath. But he lost
his way. He is a loving and
devoted father and friend. His
daughters have written - we
ask the letters should be
sealed, they are minors.
Anyone who supports Avenatti
faces abuse. I have, as a
woman
Perry: The
letter describe a man who has
decent values, generous and
kind. His ex-wife begs the
court to take into account his
full story. His daughters cite
his goofy side. I know how
those tape recordings sound.
Perry: He will
never use his law license
again. He faces serious
charges in other matters. He's
had an epoch fall. He's served
hard time already: 100 days of
solitary, and difficult home
confinement since. No one
would wish them on themselves
Perry: The
factors favor significant
leniency in this case. The
facts are unusual. There was a
whisper-thin line. What's the
distinction between Mr
Avenatti's conduct and that of
Mr Geragos, who the US did not
charge? Indulge me: Geragos
was in every conversation
Perry: Geragos
insisted on the internal
investigation, and he would
have been paid for it. The
Nike lawyers felt as extorted
by him. The US at first
agreed, and called him a
co-conspirator. I am not
making a "what-about-ism"
argument here...
Perry: This
was not a case of violent
threats, so no sentence near
the guidelines is merited. You
need to avoid unwarranted
sentencing disparities. No one
else was charged. But consider
Mr Geragos - he maintains a
national profile, speaking at
events and the like
Perry: We
submitted a chart that the US
did not meaningfully respond
to.... Judge Gardephe: You've
cited the case of a defendant
who got a 5K letter as a
cooperator. They accepted
responsibility, and expressed
remorse. I'm sure the judge
took that into account
Perry: We
request a downward variance
due to conditions at the MCC.
He was in 10 South,
essentially the Super Max
unit, for five weeks. Then he
was put in lockdown, due to a
smuggled gun. Then COVID hit.
He spent 100 days in lockdown
or solitary
Perry: I
was at the US Attorney's
Office for 11 years and never
saw the inside of the MCC -
which I think is a problem.
But I could not imagine the
conditions. I waited in the
cold to meet with him for 15
minutes. One page at a time.
Blue lips. Perry: It was not
conducive to mental health. I
saw that, unfortunately, with
respect to Mr. Avenatti. We
ask for a downward
variance. Judge
Gardephe: I'll hear from the
government. AUSA: You heard
from Mr. Franklin, and from
Nike.
AUSA: This case
was not about nasty language,
it was about abuse of trust.
Of Mr. Franklin. Mr. Avenatti
looked him in the eye, then
flew across the country and
demanded that Nike pay him,
and not Mr. Franklin. Then he
told Mr. Franklin, It went
great.
AUSA:
There's also a public abuse of
trust. He was a lawyer,
trusted by the public to
represent the interest of
others. They say, David versus
Goliath, on social media. Then
he abused that trust. And he
has a profound lack of
remorse.
AUSA: At no time
did Mr. Avenatti express an
interest in pleading guilty.
You saw that at trial. And we
saw it just now. We have yet
to see any sincere expression
of remorse. He casts blame on
others, like Mr. Geragos. But
Mr. Geragos did not meet Mr
Franklin
AUSA: Mr.
Avenatti went out and accused
Nike without having a basis.
He didn't know the purpose of
the payments. He threw the
children & the families
under the bus. Late in the
process, he accused Nike of
harming Mr. Franklin. Then he
says he did something foolish
AUSA: We submit
that a substantial sentence of
imprisonment is needed in this
case. Judge Gardephe: Mr.
Avenatti? Avenatti: May I step
to the podium? Judge Gardephe:
Please do.
Avenatti:
Your Honor, when I was child I
dreamed of becoming a lawyer.
Others wanted to be athletes.
I wanted to be a trial lawyer,
and doing good, achieving
justice. Fighting for the
little guy against the
Goliaths. For years I did just
that. Then I lost my way.
Avenatti: I
betrayed my profession. I
became driven by the things
that don't matter in life. In
the past two years I've asked,
Why did this have to happen?
I've learned that money and
notoriety are meaningless.
Everyone wants to ride in a
limo with you, not a bus
Avenatti:
Few want to take you calls
from prison. I am truly sorry
for pain I have caused Mr.
Franklin and others. I am
humbled. I still feel
positive. I know I can do
better. I can be the person I
dreamed of being (voice
cracks). I will never practice
law again
Avenatti: I am
grateful to my family. (sobs).
I'm sorry your Honor. I am
thankful to my few friends who
have stood by me. I and I
alone have destroyed my
career, my relationships, my
life. I deserve to pay, have
paid & will pay a further
price for what I have done
Avenatti: My 3
children are not here. I
decided last week I could not
ask them to give me any more.
I have already subjected them
to so much. Too much. It
should never be a child's job
to save his father. I want my
children to be ashamed of me.
Avenatti:
Because if my children are
ashamed of me, their moral
compass would be where it
should be. Thank you your
Honor. Judge Gardephe: This
arises from Mr. Avenatti's
representation of Franklin.
Nike dropped Franklin, and he
lost control of his 17 &
under team
Judge Gardephe:
Mr. Franklin turned to a
friend to help regain the Nike
sponsorship. But Nike referred
it to Boies Schiller. So after
a time, Mr. Avenatti met Mr.
Franklin on March 5, and got
documents. Avenatti told
Franklin he would represent
him.
Judge Gardephe: Geragos
told Nike's outside counsel
Wilson that "Nike has an
Adidas problem," a reference
to a prosecution in this
district. Judge Gardephe: At
the March 19 meeting, Wilson
and an in-house Nike lawyer
met Avenatti and Geragos.
Avenatti shared confidential
documents and demanded $1.5
million and that he be hired
for an internal investigation,
or he'd hold a press
conference the next day.
Judge Gardephe:
Nike's lawyers had been
working with the SDNY US
Attorney's Office's lawyers.
So they contacted them. So the
next meetings were recorded -
and used at trial. On March 19
in a call with Mr. Wilson,
Avenatti laid out his demands.
Judge
Gardephe: Avenatti said, "I'm
not going to f*ck around... A
few million doesn't move the
needle for me. I'll call the
New York Times, they're
waiting for my call. I'll take
$10 billion off your client's
market cap."
Judge Gardephe:
They proposed a $15 million
investigation, with disclosure
of the results entirely up to
Nike. Wilson asks he Nike
could just settle with
Franklin. Avenatti rejected
it, asking Why pay Franklin so
much in light of his role in
this?
Judge
Gardephe: Avenatti asked, Have
you ever held the balls of a
client in your hands? He
offered confidentiality for
$22.5 million, with he and Mr.
Geragos riding off into the
sunset. Avenatti tweeted, We
have not reached the end of
this scandal
Judge Gardephe:
Mr. Avenatti was arrested on
March 25 outside Boies
Schiller's Hudson Yards
office... Mr Avenatti grew up
near St. Louis. His father
worked for Anheuser Busch but
got laid off... Mr. Avenatti's
early years were marked by
hard work, at St Louis U
Judge Gardephe:
He transferred to Penn and
worked full time, then GWU law
school. He worked full time
and attended evening classes.
He worked at King &
Spalding. He went to O'Melveny
and Myers. He started his own
firm in 2006. The guidelines
start at 108 months.
Judge
Gardephe: The defense seeks
six months imprisonment. The
government says a "very
substantial term of
imprisonment" is necessary.
Here's my reasoning: Mr.
Avenatti's conduct was
outrageous. He hijacked his
clients claims for himself
Judge Gardephe:
Avenatti poo-pooed paying
Franklin, saying the lion's
share should go to him. Mr.
Avenatti had become drunk on
what he perceived as the power
of his platform. He thought
the rules didn't apply to him.
This is criminal conduct that
must be deterred
Judge
Gardephe: I am not persuaded
by the cases cited, including
the one involving Ms. Jackson
and Bill Cosby. Autumn Jackson
demanded $40 million - but she
had a legitimate claim against
him, being his daughter.
Judge Gardephe:
Then there's the Western New
York case, lawyers demanding a
$200 million consulting deal.
One got 2 years in a plea
bargain deal, the other a year
and day. But it's not
comparable - they were plea
bargains, and one cooperated
and got a 5K1.1 motion
Judge
Gardephe: Here, at least until
today, there was no
contrition. The so called
Varsity Blues cases are not
comparable: the defendants
expressed remorse, and sought
to resolve the charges. But Mr
Avenatti expressed that I take
to be sincere remorse today
Judge Gardephe:
108 months would be excessive,
not necessary to deter Mr.
Avenatti or others. Also, he
was held in horrific
conditions at the MCC for more
than three months. Hard to
believe those conditions could
occur in the USA.
Judge
Gardephe: A variance is also
necessary due to Mark Geragos.
He was listed an unindicted
co-conspirator. He suffered no
consequence. The government
says Geragos never met
Franklin. My answer is, He
purported to represent Mr.
Franklin
Judge
Gardephe: Maybe Mark Geragos
should have met with Mr
Franklin, if he represented
him. Instead he called and
said, Nike might have an
Adidas problem. Geragos
unlike Avenatti was an
experience criminal defense
lawyer. But he played good
cop, bad cop
Judge Gardephe:
It has never been cogently
explained why Mr. Geragos was
never acted on as a
co-conspirator. I intend to
impose a sentence of 30
months.
Judge
Gardephe: Mr. Avenatti refused
to submit a financial
affidavit, so I cannot find he
cannot pay a fine. $11 million
in judgment have already been
entered against him. It is not
clear to me how he will earn a
living. In California he faces
a 36 count indictment
Judge Gardephe:
So I will not impose a fine.
He must pay the $100 special
assessment. The US wants
restitution to Nike. The
submissions are not adequate.
The billing records are
redacted. Under "Lagos,"
restitution here is limited to
investigatory activities.
Judge Gardephe:
Nike wants to be paid for
Avenatti's post arrest attack
on it. They are not entitled
to that. The Supreme Court has
said the restitution statutes
should be narrowly construed.
I will give the US and Nike
another chance, until July 14.
Judge
Gardephe: Mr Avenatti, I am
sentencing you to 30 months
imprisonment, and three years
supervised release. Special
assessment of $300 [$100 per
count] Anything further?
Srebnick: What
about designation? We ask
surrender September 15, to BOP
Sheridan Oregon
AUSA: We do
not ask remand to prison, due
to California case.
Judge
Gardephe: I recommend the
Federal prison camp in
Sheridan, Oregon on September
15 - if not designated, to the
US Marshals here. You have the
right to appeal, notice within
14 days.
Judge Gardephe:
We are adjourned.
On August
7, 2020 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 April 14,
2021, Avenatti's Federal
Defenders wrote to Judge
Furman seeking to ban the
press from sidebars, during
jury selection in his Stormy
Daniels trial.
Inner City Press
immediately filed opposition:
"Dear Judge
Furman: This
application responds to the
defendant's letter motion
earlier this evening seeking
to bar the press from voir
dire sidebars during jury
selection in the
above-captioned trial (Dkt.
No. 107), and follows up on
Inner City Press' August 28,
2020 submission in the same
case (Dkt. No.
85).
Federal Defenders
writes to oppose any press
presence at sidebars in voir
dire, even though this has
been allowed in this District
in such recent high profile
cases such as that involving
the testimony of cooperator /
hip-hop artist Daniel
Hernandez a/k/a Tekashi
6ix9ine, US v. Jones,
18-cr-834 (PAE).
See also, US
v. Shkreli, 260 F. Supp.
3d 257 (EDNY
2017). The
instant request to ban the
press states that "no
application from any press
organization... is reflected
on the docket."
This then is such
an application, to be
docketed. Note ABC v.
Stewart, 360 F.3d 90 (2d
Cir. 2004) - the district
court erred in closing the
voir dire proceedings. 'We
therefore vacate the portion
of the district court's order
denying the media
contemporaneous access to the
voir dire.'
Already in
this case, unlike others in
this District, the defendant
and his Federal Defenders have
sought the total withholding
of his submission seeking
taxpayer funded counsel. Now
they seek further exclusion of
the press and public from the
upcoming criminal proceeding.
Inner City Press
opposes this, and asks for
media access to sidebars
throughout the
proceeding. Since
our August 2020 submission -
we still have not seen the
sought information - SDNY
Judge Rakoff, for example, has
granted Inner City Press'
application that in US v.
Weigand, 20-cr-188 (JSR), all
exhibits be made available the
evening of their submission.
See, here.
We ask, prospectively, for the
same in this proceeding - not
only on USafx but to the
public at large."
We'll have more
on this, once the situation
becomes clearer
That
case is US v. Avenatti, 19-cr-374 (Furman).
***
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