By Matthew Russell Lee, Patreon
BBC - Guardian UK - Honduras - ESPN
SDNY COURTROOM Exclusive, Sept 9 – In the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York on September 9, a detention hearing was held by Magistrate Judge Steward D. Aaron on Kimy Hakim, who was arrested on August 6 in Georgia and then spend a month being transported to SDNY.
But there's more. It emerged during the detention - or, as it happened, bail -- hearing that Hakim was previously arrested in Kenya. Inner City Press, the only media in the SDNY Mag Court, dug it up: "NAIROBI, October 13, 2008 – An American man was on Monday afternoon charged before a Kibera Court with trafficking cocaine worth about Sh8 million. Timy Hakim who was arrested on Sunday at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport as he was boarding a plane heading for Italy appeared before Kibera Chief Magistrate, Maureen Odera and denied trafficking in 1.9 kilograms of cocaine. His lawyer Cliff Ombetta applied for bail, but the prosecution objected claiming Mr Hakim might abscond."
In fact, it seems he did. Mr. Hakim, described as of Lebanese descent and having grown up in Senegal, is listed as having businesses in Benin and well as South Africa - and with getting a COVID Paycheck Protection Program loan of over $20,000, here. That's not the charge, though.
The Assistant US Attorney, mentioning not PPP but wire fraud and money laundering, urged the detention of Timy Hakim.
But Hakim's Federal Defender Ian Marcus Amelkin said he makes music videos for "African artists" and can live with his parents in Dearborn, Michigan.
In the nearly empty Magistriates court on Thursday evening, Hakim had a sort of mohawk dyed yellow, and got a new blue Covid mask.
As of November 2019 in South Africa, this: "Dear Timy Hakim, You walked out without paying your bill and refused to leave at check out time. You inconvenienced one of our arrival guests by leaving your room 3 hours late. Your childish and hysterical display at our reception desk was recorded and we reported you to the police for theft and damage to our room. You are not welcome back in this establishment nor are your dubious friends who have also been recorded."
Judge Aaron returned from a session with Pre Trial Services and said he would release Rivera on a $200,000 Personal Recognisance Bond, to be secured by $100,000 in cash or real estate - which he clarified could be the parents' home "if there is enough equity in it."
As of Thursday evening he had not been released, pending the "perfection" of the bond.
This case is US v. Hakim, 21-cr-259 (Liman / Aaron).
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