On
OneCoin Scott Cites Konstantin MCC Phone
Delay to Dec 8 Inner City Press Filed to
Unseal
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon Podcast Filing
BBC
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SDNY COURTHOUSE,
Oct 19 -- For money
laundering for scam crypto
currency OneCoin, lawyer Mark
Scott was convicted by a jury
after testimony by Konstantin
Ignatov and others but was
allowed to remain free on bail
pending sentencing. Sebastian
Greenwood, meanwhile, is in
detention and will wait (at
least) a year for a trial.
On
September 21, 2021 there was a
proceeding on and with
Greenwood and Inner City Press
live tweeted it here
and below (and podcast here)
On October 16,
Scott's lawyers told Judge
Ramos, "the Government
conceded that Konstantin had
committed perjury with respect
to one matter (his disposal of
a OneCoin laptop), while
arguing that there was no
evidence that Konstantin had
testified falsely on a second
matter raised in Mr. Scott's
motion: a supposed meeting
involving Mark Scott and Irina
Dilkinska at OneCoin's Sofia,
Bulgaria offices on July 20,
2016. As previewed in our
letter of October 1, 2021
(Dkt. 413), counsel for Mr.
Scott received documentary
evidence that Ms. Dilkinska
was in fact in India at the
time of the alleged Sofia
meeting, which it has shared
with the Government. The
Government has advised that it
is in the process of obtaining
records from foreign
authorities with respect to
Ms. Dilkinska’s travels. The
Government also disclosed on
October 12, 2021 that
Konstantin obtained and used a
contraband cellphone while
incarcerated at the MCC, that
it was seized in late February
2020, and that the case team
was informed of this a year
ago, in October 2020. Mr.
Scott seeks, with the
Government's consent, a two
week extension, until October
29, 2021, for the filing of
his Reply Brief. The parties
also request that the Court
adjourn sentencing, currently
set for November 9, 2021,
until a date convenient for
the Court in early December."
Full letter on Patreon here.
On October 19,
Judge Ramos extended things:
"MEMO ENDORSEMENT as to Mark
S. Scott re: [417] Letter on
extension... ENDORSEMENT: Mr.
Scott's reply is now due
October 29, 2021. Sentencing
is adjourned to December 8,
2021 at 2pm. SO ORDERED.
(Replies due by 10/29/2021.
Sentencing set for 12/8/2021
at 02:00 PM before Judge
Edgardo Ramos.) (Signed by
Judge Edgardo Ramos on
10/18/21)."
On October 6, the
prosecutors asked for yet
another delay on Gilbert
Armenta, who as Inner City
Press has exclusively reported
continued his businesses
during this time: "
The parties write
jointly to respectfully
request an adjournment of the
sentencing proceeding
currently scheduled in the
above-captioned case at 3:30
p.m. on October 13, 2021. The
parties remain in continuing
discussions regarding various
forfeiture issues, among other
sentencing-related issues. To
permit the parties to continue
engaging in those discussions,
the parties respectfully
request an adjournment of the
sentencing proceeding until
sometime during the week of
December 13, 2021." Watch this
site.
Late on
September 24, a month after
Inner City Press filed to
unseal it, Scott's counsel's
allegation that Konstantin
Ignatov lied that he threw
away a laptop in Las Vegas,
when he returned it to
OneCoin, has been partially
unsealed. Letter on Patreon here.
Scott's
counsel's second letter refers
to notes in an Exhibit A -
still no provided even into
September 25 - stating that
Konstantin as recently as
August 25, 2021 lied about
returning the laptop to
OneCoin because he didn't
think the US Government would
believe him... Letter on
InnerCityPress' DocumentCloud
here.
We asked, But
where is Exhibit A? Where is
the DOJ's information?
Later on
September 25, DOJ filed some,
including "Scott argues that
he is entitled to a new trial
under Rule 33 on the basis
that cooperating witness
Konstantin Ignatov testified
falsely about throwing his
laptop computer (the “Laptop”)
into a trash bin in Las Vegas
in February 2019. (Tr. 206).
Scott further alleges that the
Government purposefully
withheld this information from
the defense. To be clear, the
prosecutors in this case first
learned of these serious
allegations only when Scott
filed his Supplemental Motion.
Since then, the Government has
investigated the allegations
raised by the letter.
Specifically, the Government
has spoken with Ignatov
regarding the incident (who
immediately admitted to the
perjury) and to the U.K.-based
law enforcement agent who
first learned of the
allegations against Ignatov.
The Government immediately
turned over the notes from
those interviews to the
defense. As explained below,
Scott’s Supplemental Motion
should be denied for two
reasons: (1) the perjured
testimony, amounting to only a
small piece of Ignatov’s
testimony and regarding an
event that took place after
the charged conspiracy and was
unrelated to Scott’s guilt,
was not material to the jury’s
verdict; and (2) Ignatov’s
full testimony had limited
relevance to the key issue in
dispute at trial, i.e.,
Scott’s knowing participation
in the charged criminal
conspiracies. The Government
presented overwhelming
independent evidence of
Scott’s guilt, consisting of
emails, chat messages, bank
records, travel records, other
witness testimony, and
recordings, that supported the
jury’s verdict on that issue
(and all of the other elements
of the charged offenses)." 32
pages on Patreon here.
Now on October 1,
Scott's lawyer have asked to
more time, saying they have
more information: "following
the unsealing of the
Supplemental Motion and the
Government's Opposition
last week, counsel for Mr.
Scott has received credible
information that Konstantin's
perjury was far more
extensive than he has
admitted, and included false
testimony that Irina
Dilkinska attended a
three-way meeting with Ruja
Ignatova and Mark Scott on
July 20, 2016 at OneCoin
offices in Sofia, Bulgaria.
Defense counsel anticipates
that newly obtained
documentary evidence
will conclusively establish
that Dilkinska was not in
Bulgaria at that time.
Mr. Scott needs time to
investigate this additional
information concerning
Konstantin’s perjury and
related disclosure
issues.1 Accordingly,
Mr. Scott proposes submitting
a Reply Memorandum to the
Supplemental Motion for a New
Trial on October 15, 2021."
Letter on Patreon here.
More to follow.
From Sept 21:
Assistant US Attorney Dimase:
We have nearly completed
providing discovery to Mr.
Greenwood. Still to be
produced is the dump of a cell
phone recovered from Mr.
Greenwood in jail. The gov't
today received a 20 GB
download from the phone.
Judge
Ramos: After that, discovery
will be complete?
AUSA Dimase: We
may obtain more... We had
discussions about a motion
schedule in the first half of
2022, in the Spring with a
trial in the summer or fall.
Greenwood's
lawyer: We could come back in
five months and update you, if
we're done with our review of
the discovery, with an eye on
a Fall trial.
Courtroom Deputy
Rivera: February 24 at 3:30
pm. AUSA Dimase: In
person? Judge Ramos: I'm
always hopeful.
Greenwood's
lawyer: Thank you for your
time. Judge Ramos: We are
adjourned. Please stay well.
On May 24,
2021 Mark Scott's sentencing
was again pushed back, this
time from June 14 into
September.
On August 24,
Mark Scott's lawyers
asked for yet another
postponement of his
sentencing, in a heavily
redacted letter. The basis is
a motion filed under seal, and
a medical procedure "due to
the COVID-19 situation in
Florida."
On August 25, the
US Attorney's Office opposed
the request, but left the
basis mysterious, writing:
"The Government is in the
process of investigating the
allegations raised in the
supplemental motion and will
respond to the claims raised
by the motion. Nonetheless,
even the claims in the
supplemental motion do not
establish a basis for a new
trial pursuant to Rule 33
under prevailing legal
precedent."
And on August 25,
Inner City Press filed a
letter with Judge Ramos,
cc-ing the prosecutors and
Scott's counsel, formally
asking that the motion be
unsealed - still not docketed
as of Aug 30, unlike the
practice of other SDNY judges.
(Now
on
DocumentCloud,
here;
podcast here).
Vlog here.
On
September 13,
counsel for
Mark Scott and
for the US
Attorney's
Office were told
by Judge
Ramos'
chambers (to its
credit),
"Judge Ramos
directs the
parties to
respond
to this
request."
The August 25
letter: Dear Judge
Ramos: This
concerns, in the
above-captioned criminal case
that concerns money laundering
for the OneCoin scheme, the
request to entirely seal a
judicial document requesting a
new trial for the defendant.
The filing(s) should be
unsealed in full, or if the
Court sees fit, in
part. I have
been covering the case for
Inner City Press, see also,
e.g., The Guardian (UK),
November 25, 2019, "In
testimony live-tweeted by the
investigative
journalism website Inner
City Press, Ignatov
reportedly referred to
Abdulaziz as 'one of the main
money launderers' involved in
the scheme."
Yesterday,
Scott's counsel filed a letter
(Dkt 390) requesting a
sentencing adjournment based
on "the need for the Court to
consider and address the
Supplemental Rule 22 Motion
(including the request for an
evidentiary hearing) filed
under seal on August 23,
2021." That motion is a
judicial document, within the
meaning of United States v.
Aref, 533 F.3d 72, 81-83 (2d
Cir. 2008) and Lugosch v.
Pyramid Co., 435 F.3d 110 (2d
Cir. 2006) - it should be made
available.
It is not
entirely clear to me if the
letter has been docketed.
There is an August 13 notation
of a SEALED DOCUMENT placed in
vault. This is a request to
unseal that as well, and to
review the redaction in Dkt
390. Judge Richard Sullivan,
only today, ruled that a
discussion of a defendant's
COVID status was not entitled
to sealing. See US v. Ernest
Murphy, 18-cr-373 (Sullivan),
dkt 857. This is a case
of public import, and these
are judicial documents.
Inner City
Press routinely files requests
to unseal in this District,
and other Districts -
including as cited in its
March 31 request, here
And Judge Broderick's
docketing of Inner City Press'
request to unseal in US v.
Ashe / Piao, 15-cr-706, Dkt No
999 (Inner City Press letter)
& Dkt 998 (ordering that
sealing be justified or
removed by April 9).
And see,
regarding public access to
allegedly confidential
information, Judge Furman's
recent grant of Inner City
Press request to unseal in US
v. Avenatti, 19-cr-374 (JMF),
Docket No. 134. See also, July
27, 2021, NYLJ,
"Judge Orders Release of
Michael Avenatti's Financial
Affidavits In Stormy Daniels
Theft Case," "Journalist
Matthew Russell Lee of Inner
City Press had intervened,
advocating for the affidavits'
release."
(Now on
DocumentCloud, here;
podcast here).Watch
this site.
Inner
City Press
back on March
13 asked the
US Attorney's
Office Press
Office for its
filings not
yet in the
public
docket.
Here
is Inner City Press' Periscope
video upon leaving the
courthouse. The case is US v.
Scott, 17-cr-630
(Ramos).
***
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