SDNY COURTHOUSE, June 24 – A black bag with heroin in it was stopped at a bus stop in Missouri back on May 17. The woman carrying the heroin agreed to work with the government and carrying out delivery in New York. There, the government says, Nestor Carosiol Sosa-Ortiz emerged from a restaurant bathroom with $4000 wrapped in toilet paper.
On June 25 Sosa-Ortiz waited shackled for a status conference before U.S. District Court for the Southern District of the New York Judge John G. Koeltl. There was a mix up with the court reporter then an additional delay. Then when the short proceeding actually took place, the main outcome other than setting the next, post-discovery conference for September 10 was to exclude time under the Speedy Trial Act.
The phrase nearly invariably used is that the interests of justice outweigh the interests of the public and of the defendant in a speedy trial. Here, Judge Koeltl said that the exclusion of time is "in the best interest of the public." How? The case is USA v. Sosa-Ortiz, 19-cr-405 (JGK).
If a person in charge of information technology or computers for a retirement plan is accused of taking kick backs, does it violate the ERISA statute? The issue arose as an argument to try to postpone a trial in before Judge Koeltl on June 11. The request was triggered by a superseding indictment including new counts.
The defense lawyer for Shivanand Maharaj, Henry E. Mazurek (whom Inner City Press readers may remember from the US v. Pinto-Thomaz trial) asked for time to brief the issue, posing as a hypothetical would a custodian or janitor who just happened to work at an ERISA retirement plan be covered?
Judge Koeltl appears to believe the answer is yes, although he went to great pains to say he never decided an issue before it is fully briefed. In this case it will be fast: briefs by Mazurek and Sarita Kedia for co-defendant Enrico Rubano due on June 21, US response by June 25, reply as well as request to charge by June 27.
The trial is set to begin on July 9. Inner City Press will be covering this case, USA v. Rubano, 17-cr-169 (JGK). More on Patreon, here.
On June 10 when Woojae Jung appeared for sentencing for insider trading while at Goldman Sachs before SDNY Judge Lewis A. Kaplan, his lawyer argued for no jail time, citing the possible immigration law consequence of this sentencing.
Assistant US Attorney Andrew Thomas asked for 18 to 24 months.
Jung's own statement was largely about his wife, who works for Facebook. He did not mention his brother in South Korea, who opened up the trading account in the name of a college friend.
Judge Kaplan said he was going to impose a non-guideline sentence "but not what you're hoping to hear." It is a sentence of three months in prison, which takes Jung out of the mandatory detention requirement. Kaplan said he recommends that Homeland Security adjust Jung status and recommends against detention. He recommended a minimum security camp.
Jung's lawyer added that if the last is not granted he be designated to Lompoc and in any event not a privately contracted facility. Judge Kaplan agreed to both. There's $130,000 restitution and a $30,000 fine.
As if in another world, at a dry cleaner's at 727 Westchester Avenue in The Bronx on 21 September 2018, Angel Perez walked in with a mask on his face and a gun in his hand, demanding money to support his Xanax habit.
The dry cleaner ended up shot in the ankle; Perez was arrested at his home nearby on Jackson Avenue.
On June 10 Perez who was allowed to plead guilty to brandishing rather than discharging or firing the gun showed up before SDNY Judge William H. Pauley III for sentencing. His Federal Defender Mark B. Gombiner asked that sentence be limited to the seven year mandatory minimum.
Assistant US Attorney Jacob R. Fiddelman argued for 125 to 135 months. In the gallery where Inner City Press was the only media present was Carmen Rosario which whom Perez has lived since he got out of prison in 2005. In a letter to Judge Pauley she says "he is still magical in my eyes."
The ex dry cleaner, his name redacted, wrote a victim's impact statement that he is an immigrant and that after being shot when he tried to sell his business he couldn't: "no one was interested in the property where a gun incident took place. I sincerely hope that we are protected from his potential revenge."
Judge Pauley after recounting Perez' early life - both parents were drug addicts, he said - addressed the defendant directly to say, This is unacceptable, from a 52 year hold. He imposed a sentence of 108 months, which is to say nine years. The ex dry cleaner wrote, "I am terrified by the thought that the attacker may [take] revenge on me and my family after serving his jail term."
Back on May 23, less than an hour after witnessing Peter Bright presented in shackled in front of his wife in the SDNY Magistrates Court, Inner City Press published into Google News a story about it, including Bright's statement that he was training an 11 year told girl in The Bronx.
Also Periscope video here, round up tweet.Inner City Press reported that Bright's Federal Defenders lawyer argued that a video camera in Bright's Brooklyn apartment building militates for his release on bond. He was not released.
Two weeks later the Daily Dot's Claire Goforth from Florida published a story about Bright's arrest based off the complaint on the PACER document system. This has been picked up, with and without more. But why is there no document in PACER about the proceeding that was due on June 6? On any renewed bid for bail by the Federal Defenders, who since that as reported by Inner City Press got another accused pedophile Byran Pivnick released? Inner City Press which first reported this case will continue on it. Watch this site, @InnerCityPress and the new @SDNYLIVE.
See Inner City Press' May 23 Periscope round up, at 1:10 on this pedophile presentment, here
From Inner City Press' exclusive May 23 report: "A dual British - US citizen living in Brooklyn but reaching out for underage sex was presented, with his wife in the courtroom by that time only with Inner City Press. Federal Defender Amy Gallichio argued that Peter Bright should be released, since his building in Brooklyn has a video surveillance system.
But would the neighbors want the U.S. Attorney's Office to see their comings and goings? Gallichio offered for Bright to install his own camera over his door and turn the files in to the government. Judge Freeman found this of intersted and invited a second try, if only in writing. She quizzed Bright's all-American wife in the gallery and said the Peter is lucky. Was his claim to be "training" an eleven year old girl in The Bronx just puffery? Inner City Press will stay on this case." And now we are.