Urologist
Paduch Sentenced to Life in Prison
Now Files to Appeals and Redact
Transcript
by
Matthew Russell Lee, Patreon Book
Substack
SDNY COURTROOM,
Dec 2 – Urologist
Darius Paduch
was arrested
and arraigned
on April 11,
2023. Inner
City Press was
there.
U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York
Magistrate
Judge Sarah L.
Cave held
Paduch's
arraignment.
Though Paduch
had filled out
the affidavit
to get a
publicly paid
lawyer, the
CJA on duty
David Stern
said he was
for now only
representing
him for the
presentment,
and possibly
to put
together
co-signers for
a bail
package. He
consented to
detention.
Paduch
was in a t-shirt,
with left arm
tattoos and boots
untied, now
without laces.
Stern said
there are many
medical
issues.
The bail
application,
Stern said,
may be Monday.
Judge Cave
notes that she
will no longer
be presiding
in the Mag
Court then.
But Inner City
Press will be
there.
More
including analysis
on Substack here
The
prosecutors
said:
From at least
in or about
2015 through
at least in or
about 2019,
PADUCH, while
working as a
urologist,
enticed and
induced
multiple
victims to
travel to his
medical
offices at
Medical
Institution-1,
so PADUCH
could, among
other things,
sexually abuse
the
victims.
In or about
2019, PADUCH
began
practicing at
a different
hospital
located in
Long Island,
New York
(“Medical
Institution-2”),
where he
continued to
sexually abuse
patients."
On April 19
Paduch's
counsel submitted
a letter to
Magistrate
Judge Jennifer
E. Willis
for release on
bail, attaching
his TIAA
retirement ($1,500,000)
Citibank home
equity
($400,000) and
name of his
life partner
and proposed
co-signer,
Robert
Lischer. "The
couple is also
parenting a
nine year old
son they
adopted
together in
2020."
Another
proposed
co-signer: Jordan
Roosma; "he
met Dr. Paduch
as a patient
at 13 years
old." Also, Paduch's
cousin
Jadwiga
Wojcik,
employed at
Greene, Tweed
& Company.
But he
was denied.
On May
16, Paduch's
counsel filed the
motion,
stating that Paduch "has
a loving
husband,
Robert
Lischer, and a
son, William.
He currently resides
in North Bergen, New
Jersey... a very
different
defendant than
Jeffrey Epstein."
On May
24, the bail
hearing. Inner
City Press was
there, thread
here.
On
December 21,
Paduch's
counsel
wrote in that
the AUSA
Attorney's
Office
conveyed to
him that "JR"
wanted his
name redacted.
Inner
City Press had
already
published it,
above: Jordan
Roosma.
On
December 22
Judge Abrams
temporarily
redacted the
entirety of
the paragraph,
at least until
January 5, while
noting Judge
Kaplan's granting
of Inner City
Press'
application to
unseal SBF's suretors.
This
as the US
Attorney's
Office
similarly "takes no
position" on
the
sealing of all
of OneCoin convict
Sebastian Greenwood's
sentencing
letter, which
has required
Inner City
Press to waste
its time (and money
- a $405
filing fee)
appealing to
the Second
Circuit.
There are
other cases in
the
SDNY were
after-the-fact sealing
is causing
free press
problems. In US v.
Paduch,
on January 2
Inner City
Press filed
opposition, docketed
on January 3
(and now on
our
DocumentCloud
here
On
April 29 in Courtroom
218, Paduch's
lawyer was
questioning a
doctor on the
witness stand.
It was unwieldy, as
the patients
being asked
about were
all by
pseudonym, but the
lists
they had were
of real names.
The lawyer went over to
retrieve a
binder of
exhibits -
which he said
were all sealed.
Docketed
on May 6,
Judge Abrams
ruled: "ORDER
as to Darius A
Paduch: Before
the Court is
the
Governments
motion in
limine
regarding Dr.
Deryn
Strange's
testimony. The
Government's
motion is
granted in
part and
denied in
part. In
addition to
the undisputed
areas of
testimony, the
Court will
permit
testimony as
to the
following: Dr.
Strange's
opinions under
the heading
"Expectancy
and
[M]otivation,"
which
includes, in
part, her
opinion that
information
acquired over
time can
change how
people
interpret
earlier
events; Dr.
Strange's
opinions under
the heading
"Memory
Distortion and
False
Memories,"
which
includes, in
part, her
opinion that
the
information
that people
learn from
others can
influence how
they later
recall an
event; Dr.
Strange's
opinions under
the heading
"Possible
Sources of
Suggestive
Influence,"
which
includes, in
part, her
opinion that
the influence
of other
sourcessuch as
media,
retelling of a
story,
therapy, and
dreamscan lead
to the
formation of
false
memories; and
Dr. Strange's
opinions under
the heading
"Psychopathology,"
which
includes, in
part, her
opinion that a
history of
trauma can
increase the
likelihood of
memory
distortion.
The Court will
not permit
testimony as
to the
following: Dr.
Strange's
opinion that
memory is
subject to
forgetting;
Dr. Strange's
opinions under
the heading
"Low IQ,"
which
includes, in
part, her
opinion that
individuals
with
borderline IQ
scores are
more prone to
suggestibility
and
acquiescence
unless
Defendant
identifies
evidence for
the Court that
any of the
former
patients have
a low or
borderline IQ
score, or
studies that
support the
proposition
that patients
with
Klinefelter
Syndrome are
more prone to
suggestibility
or
acquiescence;
and Dr.
Stranges
opinions in
the concluding
section of her
report that
bear
specifically
on the former
patients'
memories. The
parties should
be prepared to
discuss the
draft jury
charge after
testimony on
Monday, May 6,
2024."
They
did, and
closing
arguments were
May 7.
On May 8
the jury found
Paduch
guilty on all
11 counts.
On
August 2
Paduch's
motion under
Rule 33 was
denied as
Judge Abrams
found his
convictions
were not
unconstitutional
because
they rely on a
less serious
underlying
provision: NY
Penal Law Section
130.55.
On August
23, Paduch
through
counsel asked
to further
delay his
sentencing, to
mid-November.
It was
set for November
20. On
November 12,
Paduch's
lawyer wrote
in noting that
Probation recommends
30 years, but
asking for 10
years.
On
November 15
the US
Attorney's
Office wrote
in asking for
"at least 30
years' imprisonment."
On November
20 in large
courtroom 110,
after the mother of
one of
Paduch's
victim spoke
at length
asking for a
life sentence
like she said she
and her son
face, Paduch
was sentenced
to life in prison.
On
November 27,
Paduch's
counsel filed
notice of
appeal to the
Second Circuit -
and on
December 2, he
filed notice that
he intends to
seek redaction to
the
transcript.
The case is US
v. Paduch,
23-cr-181
(Abrams)
***
Your
support means a lot. As little as $5 a month
helps keep us going and grants you access to
exclusive bonus material on our Patreon
page. Click
here to become a patron.
Feedback:
Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
SDNY Press Room 480, front cubicle
500 Pearl Street, NY NY 10007 USA
Mail: Box 20047, Dag
Hammarskjold Station NY NY 10017
Reporter's mobile (and weekends):
718-716-3540
Other, earlier Inner City Press are
listed here,
and some are available in the ProQuest
service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
Copyright 2006-2023 Inner City
Press, Inc. To request reprint or other
permission, e-contact Editorial [at]
innercitypress.com
|