Man Who Pled to Gun Charge Is Found
To Have Shot at Police so Over Guideline
Sentence Near
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon Maxwell
Book
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
Jan 4 - Jamar Baker was
allowed to plead guilty to
being a felon in possession of
a fire arm. Then the
government added that he had
fired on a police man after
ramming his car, and asked for
five years in prison.
In the
U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York
on January 4, Judge Lewis A.
Kaplan held a Fatico hearing.
Inner City Press was there.
On the
stand was NYPD Officer Frank
Garrido. He described getting
tapped and then rammed by a
car, variously described as
grey or black, silver or even
white.
Maker's
Federal Defender cross
examined, implying that there
was something suspicious about
Officer Garrido calling
Officer Joseph instead of
9-1-1. He focused on the lack
of damage to the cars, while
Judge Kaplan pointed out that
if a car is going 70 mph and
is hit from behind by one
going 71 mph, it might not
leave a dead. The Federal
Defender said he respectfully
disagreed, which Judge Kaplan
noted.
Ultimately
Judge Kaplan found by a
preponderance of the evidence,
the applicable standard, that
Baker was in the car and was
the shooter, and that he fired
at the victim. Sentencing is
set for January 18 at 11 am.
The case is US v.
Baker, 22-cr-200 (Kaplan)
***
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