EFTA00065241.pdf
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Subject: SDNY News Clips, Thursday, February 13, 2020
Date: Thu, 13 Feb 2020 22:20:27 +0000
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SDNY News Clips
Thursday, February 13, 2020
EFTA00065241
Contents
Public Corruption
Epstein
Avenatti
Violent and Organized Crime
Ray.
Complex Frauds and Cybercrime
Blicht
Rowe
Securities and Commodities Fraud
Orlean
Money Laundering and Transnational Criminal Enterprises
Haney
General Crimes
Myrie
White Plains
Klein
Matters of Interest
Stone
Weinstein
New York Times
Public Corruption
Epstein
Barclays C.E.O. Faces U.K. Inquiry on Jeffrey Epstein Ties
NYT
By Carlos Tejada and Arnie Tsang
2/13/2020
British banking regulators want to know if the chief executive of Barclays has been honest about his relationship with
Jeffrey Epstein.
Barclays said on Thursday that regulators were investigating how its chief executive, James E. Staley, described to bank
officials his ties with Mr. Epstein, the financier who killed himself in August after facing new allegations of sex trafficking of
underage girls.
Mr. Staley, one of a handful of prominent Wall Street financiers who has been linked to Mr. Epstein, said he had been fully
forthcoming about their relationship, which he said ended before he arrived at the bank five years ago.
"I feel very comfortable, going back to 2015, I have been transparent and open with the bank," he said on a conference
call with analysts on Thursday. Mr. Staley did not respond to messages seeking comment.
The bank's announcement of an investigation by regulators including the Financial Conduct Authority, the main overseer
of banks in Britain, was another black eye for Mr. Staley, who is the latest Barclays chief to have regulatory troubles. John
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S. Varley faced regulatory and legal charges over capital infusions from the Persian Gulf nation of Qatar and Robert E.
Diamond Jr. was caught up in the Libor-rigging scandal.
Even as Mr. Staley has cut costs and bolstered the company's commitment to investment banking, his tenure has been
marked by a series of questions over his judgment. The bank and Mr. Staley were both fined by regulators over a whistle-
blower scandal, and other stumbles have prompted some shareholders to demand his resignation.
In a statement, Barclays said it believed that "Mr. Staley has been sufficiently transparent with the company as regards the
nature and extent of his relationship with Mr. Epstein." Mr. Staley, the bank said, retained the full confidence of its board.
The inquiry began some time last year, when the Financial Conduct Authority contacted Barclays with questions about Mr.
Staley's relationship with Mr. Epstein, according to the bank's annual report, which was published Thursday.
Barclays responded to the regulator's questions, but some element of that response raised questions within the agency,
according to a bank official who spoke on the condition of anonymity. A more formal investigation then began in
December.
Thursday's announcement undercut a positive earnings report from the bank. Total income for 2019 rose 2 percent, and
profit after taxes rose 30 percent for the year. Barclay's shares ended the day down 1.7 percent.
Mr. Epstein portrayed himself as indispensable to corporate executives and built up a small but powerful finance network,
which Mr. Staley remained a part of even after Mr. Epstein's 2008 conviction on a charge of soliciting prostitution from a
teenage girl. The men had known each other since at least 1999, when the future Barclays chief was running the private
banking business of JPMorgan and using Mr. Epstein to connect with potential clients.
The relationship was close enough that Mr. Staley visited Mr. Epstein about 10 years ago, while he was serving time in
Florida for soliciting prostitution from a minor. The visit occurred at Mr. Epstein's Palm Beach office, where he was allowed
to serve part of his 13-month sentence.
Among others, Mr. Epstein connected Mr. Staley with
The deal elevated the asset management division that Mr. Staley
ran at JPMorgan into a major player in world. (Mr. who married a former girlfriend of Mr. Epstein,
Mr. Epstein invoked his relationship with Mr. Staley as part of his own business maneuvers. He listed Mr. Staley and
JPMorgan as references when he applied for a license to set up a bank, Southern Country International, in the Virgin
Islands in 2013. Mr. Staley's spokesman said he was unaware of this at the time.
Until Thursday, Mr. Staley's history with Mr. Epstein had not appeared to pose a serious threat to his leadership. (Indeed,
their ties were known as of the middle of 2015, when Mr. Staley was merely a contender for the Barclays position.)
But Mr. Staley's tenure has faced other bouts of turmoil.
In 2016, he tried to unmask a whistle-blower who had criticized one of his senior hires. That led to a fine of $15 million for
Barclays from New York's banking regulator, which said that it had uncovered "shortcomings in governance, controls and
corporate culture" at the bank. British bank regulators also fined Mr. Staley about $1.5 million and required the bank to
submit reports on parts of its whistle-blowing program.
Mr. Staley also upset a big client, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, in 2016 after trying to help his brother-in-law's business
interests.
His conduct is now under scrutiny by the Financial Conduct Authority, whose responsibilities include assessing the "fitness
and propriety" of senior executives at financial institutions. Among the qualities the regulator looks at, according to its
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website, is honesty, "including openness with self-disclosures, integrity and reputation."
In August, Mr. Epstein killed himself while in a Manhattan jail, where he was being held awaiting trial on federal sex
trafficking and conspiracy charges. He had been charged by Manhattan prosecutors in July with sexually exploiting dozens
of women and girls in New York and Florida.
Those accusations involved actions up to 2005. A lawsuit filed last month by Denise N. George, the attorney general of the
Virgin Islands, cited further evidence that Mr. Epstein had sexually abused and trafficked hundreds of young women and
girls on his private Caribbean island, some as recently as 2018.
A judge in the Virgin Islands who is overseeing the administration of Mr. Epstein's $635 million estate is considering a
proposal to establish a compensation fund for his accusers. Ms. George is seeking to block that effort, contending the
executors of the estate are conflicted because they were longtime business advisers to Mr. Epstein.
Avenatti
Michael Avenatti's extortion trial held up for juror's job interview
NY Post
By Gabrielle Fonrouge and Lee Brown
2/13/2020
A decision in Michael Avenatti's extortion trial was unexpectedly held up Thursday morning — so a juror could go on a job
interview in the middle of deliberations.
"I'm really speechless," Judge Paul Gardephe complained at being forced to approve the last-minute hold-up to the high-
profile case in Manhattan federal court.
Juror No. 9 had previously requested permission to head to the interview late Thursday afternoon, with deliberations due
to be paused briefly if a decision had yet to be reached by then.
However, she sent a note to the judge early Thursday saying she now had to show up at 11:30 a.m. because one of the
interviewers was heading out of town.
Despite his frustrations, Gardephe approved the halt to deliberations after the juror insisted she "will be passed up for the
position" if she does not show, the court heard.
Avenatti has pleaded not guilty to charges alleging that he tried to extort up to $25 million from Nike by threatening to
publicly expose corruption unless he was allowed to conduct an internal probe of the company.
Prosecutors say he had more than $11million in debts at the time.
Avenatti's lawyers have argued that he was doing an honest and legal negotiation with the shoemaker on behalf of an
amateur basketball coach who wanted Nike to clean up its act.
Violent and Organized Crime
Ray
The Bizarre Life of the Man Accused in the Sarah Lawrence Sex Case
NYT
By Sharon Otterman
2/12/2020
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Lawrence V. Ray was charged with conspiracy, extortion, sex trafficking, forced labor and related charges.
Credit...Jefferson Siegel for The New York Times
He has known mobsters and politicians and high-ranking American military officers. He has portrayed himself as an
international man of mystery who played a role in helping to end the war in Kosovo in the late 1990s.
He had contacts with foreign leaders and arranged Mikhail Gorbachev's visit to City Hall in 1997 to meet with the then-
mayor, Rudolph W. Giuliani. For the last 19 years, he has been in and out of legal trouble for everything from involvement
in a mob stock pump-and-dump scheme to custody issues involving his children.
For decades, Lawrence V. Ray, 60, who was charged by federal law enforcement on Tuesday in a bizarre scheme that
included extortion, forced prostitution and forced labor involving a group of students he met while he was living with his
daughter at Sarah Lawrence College, has been described by some as a master manipulator.
Burly and intense, Mr. Ray has put himself at the center of local politics. In 1998, he was the best man at the wedding of a
former New York police commissioner, Bernard B. Kerik.
But he's also turned on those who have trusted him — first as an F.B.I. informant against the mob, and then as a
cooperating witness in an investigation that would ultimately land Mr. Kerik in prison.
In 2010, apparently down and out, Mr. Ray, who had recently been released from prison on a custody charge, moved into
his daughter's dorm room at Sarah Lawrence College in Yonkers, N.Y., federal investigators said.
He is now facing decades in prison, accused of manipulating students from the school to the point that they were willing
to falsely confess to crimes. He is charged with coercing one woman into prostitution, and with stealing $1 million from
his victims, according to the indictment unsealed on Tuesday.
"Larry Ray is a psychotic con man who has victimized every friend he's ever had," Mr. Kerik, who has said he cut ties with
Mr. Ray in 2000, was quoted as saying in the 2019 New York magazine article that prompted the government's
investigation. "It's been close to 20 years since I last heard from him, yet his reign of terror continues."
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The following portrait of Mr. Ray was put together from interviews, court documents and news coverage by The Times
over the years.
Here's what we know about him:
Ties to reputed mobsters, fears of a hit man
Mr. Ray, who is also known as Lawrence Grecco, grew up in Brooklyn and New Jersey. In the 1980s, he became a partner
in a bar in Scotch Plains, N.J., called Club Malibu and JJ Rockers. At the bar, he began meeting people from all walks of life,
including politicians from New York and New Jersey.
In the early 1990s, he formed a commercial insurance brokerage firm, helping insure people for projects such as
construction.
In this role, he met a reputed mobster who owned a company called U.S. Bridge of New York, according to federal
investigators. Mr. Ray agreed to help the company get insurance for a major project.
At some point in the mid-1990s, Mr. Ray began to believe that someone from the mob attached to the company was
trying to kill him. Mr. Kerik helped him contact the F.B.I., according to emails between the two men. Mr. Ray began serving
as an informant in a federal investigation related to a wide-ranging security fraud scheme involving the pumping and
dumping of stocks. He ended up being indicted himself, along with 18 others, for a role in the scheme.
In 2000, federal investigators charged Mr. Ray with agreeing to pay a $100,000 bribe to a bond brokerage firm executive,
according to a 2004 federal court filing. He pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit security fraud and was sentenced to
five years probation.
Friendship with Mayor Giuliani's police commissioner
Appointed New York City police commissioner in 2000, Mr. Kerik became a national figure after the Sept. 11terror attacks.
In 2004, President George W. Bush nominated Mr. Kerik to lead the Department of Homeland Security. But a series of
scandals, some of which involved Mr. Ray, destroyed that chance.
Mr. Kerik and Mr. Ray had become friends in the mid-1990s. The two men worked out together and rode motorcycles. At
the time, Mr. Kerik was a rising star in the New York City Department of Correction. He became the commissioner of the
department early in 1998.
In November 1998, Mr. Kerik got married in New Jersey, and Mr. Ray served as best man. Mr. Ray and another friend, also
a partner in Club Malibu, wrote checks to cover parts of Mr. Kerik's wedding and reception.
In 1999, Mr. Kerik wanted to renovate his new apartment in Riverdale, in the Bronx, according to emails between Mr. Ray
and Mr. Kerik. The scandal over who paid for his renovation ended up engulfing Mr. Kerik.
Through Mr. Ray, Mr. Kerik befriended a man named Frank DiTommaso, who ran a construction company, the Interstate
Industrial Corporation, with his brother. The company hired Mr. Ray as its security director, according The Times's
coverage of a resulting case that accused the former city police commissioner of, among other things, accepting illegal
renovations on his Bronx apartment.
The company had performed more than $200,000 in renovations on the apartment for almost no cost. State and federal
investigators discovered the arrangement after Mr. Kerik withdrew from consideration for Homeland Security secretary.
Mr. Ray agreed to cooperate with investigators looking into Mr. Kerik. In 2006, Mr. Kerik pleaded guilty to misdemeanor
charges related to $165,000 in gifts received from the construction company. He was jailed three years later after pleading
to eight federal felony charges.
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Arranging a visit by Mikhail Gorbachev
Mr. Ray had contacts with at least one American general and Russian officials. He liked to talk about how he helped broker
a deal to end bombing in Kosovo in the late 1990s, a claim at least partly backed up by a letter from NATO in court
records, The Washington Post reported in 2007.
Somehow, he also formed a connection with someone who worked for Mr. Gorbachev, the former leader of the Soviet
Union. In 1997, Mr. Ray helped to arrange for Mr. Gorbachev to visit New York, where he met with Mr. Giuliani at City Hall.
He later said he arranged the visit, on Dec. 18, 1997, at Mr. Kerik's request.
A photograph from the time shows Mr. Ray outside City Hall that day, standing behind Mr. Gorbachev, with Mr. Kerik in
the foreground. Mr. Kerik and Mr. Gorbachev are both gesturing with their hands in opposite directions.
Beaten up in a lobby
Mr. Ray would end up cooperating with authorities in cases against not only Mr. Kerik but also Mr. DiTommaso. Mr. Ray
testified against Mr. DiTommaso in a 2012 perjury trial related to the renovation scandal.
Years later, the slight was not forgotten. Mr. Ray popped up in the news in 2017, when a video from two years earlier of
his being pummeled in the lobby of the Hudson Hotel by Mr. DiTommaso was obtained by the Daily News.
The video shows Mr. DiTommaso walking past Mr. Ray, and then back toward him after apparently recognizing him. Mr.
DiTommaso then attacked Mr. Ray. Two people nearby in the lobby rushed over and tried to stop the attack.
The beating left Mr. Ray with a skull fracture as well as permanent speech and other neurological problems, Mr. Ray's
lawyer, Edward Hayes, said at the time. Federal investigators now charge that by that point Mr. Ray was already years into
his extortion schemes involving the students from Sarah Lawrence College.
Complex Frauds and Cybercrime
Blicht
Crooked International Longshoremen's Association honcho sentenced to two years for taking $150,000 in bribes
NY Daily News
By Stephen Rex Brown
2/12/2020
The ex-president of a local Longshoremen's union was sentenced to two years in prison Wednesday for taking $150,000 in
bribes.
Glenn Blicht, 57, was convicted of using his powerful post as president of the International Longshoremen's Association
Local 1964 to shake down the owner of a dry cleaning and laundry business.
He spent the dirty money — which he referred to as "tickets" — on designer watches, custom clothing, sports tickets,
meals at pricey restaurants, and cigars, the feds said.
"As the president of a labor union, Glenn Blicht's duty was to fight for his union members. Instead, he repeatedly sold
them out in exchange for cash bribes, which he spent on luxury items. For this betrayal, he has been sentenced to federal
prison," Manhattan U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman said.
Blicht's downfall came was due to the president of a laundry business becoming a cooperating witness.
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The ILA repped workers of the business, many of whom contributed $25 monthly dues while earning minimum wage,
prosecutors said. The bribery scheme began as early as 2009, when Blicht was an officer of the union.
Around that time, Blicht crossed paths with the laundry owner and his wife in a restaurant, according to court papers.
Blicht noted a ring the owner's wife was wearing.
"I could own that ring if your husband doesn't do the right thing;' Blicht allegedly said.
"If you want to have a good union, you want to have peace, you'll take care of me," he said on a different occasion,
prosecutors said.
Blicht got impatient ahead of a meeting with the laundry owner at a restaurant last July.
"Don't screw me on this. Cause if you do — this is not a threat, it's a promise — you're gonna regret it," he said in a call
recorded by prosecutors. He was arrested after that meeting carrying a $10,000 bribe, prosecutors said.
Blicht had argued he was a tireless advocate for workers and noted that an independent monitor determined the bribery
did not affect his union's representation of its members.
Rowe
Deranged cyberstalker harassed Bronx student for nearly six years, cops say
NY Post
By Gabrielle Fonrouge
2/13/2020
A deranged cyber-stalker who harassed a Bronx high school student he met on a gaming platform has been arrested,
federal prosecutors announced Wednesday.
The suspect hacked into the girl's online accounts, sent SWAT teams to her house and even broke into her school's grading
system, authorities said.
Back in 2014, Tristan Rowe, who refers to himself as Angus, first met the victim while they were playing an online video
game. But after about four months, the victim stopped playing and told Rowe she didn't want to speak to him anymore, a
criminal complaint alleges.
That's when Rowe — of Smyrna, Tennessee — began a campaign of cyber harassment that lasted nearly six years and
included the victim, her dad, her sister, her ex-boyfriend, her ex's sister and her mom's boyfriend, court papers say.
Angus started calling the victim persistently and receiving text messages that were "obsessive," "lewd" and "threatening,"
investigators allege.
"When I get u im putting u in the back of the trunk bitch ass n—a ill cut u from f-king ear to ear and ill pull ur tongue
through the slit Columbian style bitch," one text, allegedly sent by Rowe, reads.
He also allegedly texted her a large kitchen knife, a text asking if he should sign the victim up for "an escorts website," and
a message depicting a detailed map showing the route from Tennessee to the victim's Bronx home, prosecutors allege.
He allegedly sent a picture of an adult penis to the sister of the victim's ex-partner, prosecutors said.
Rowe appeared to get a sick pleasure from the harassment and even admitted he was the victim's cyberstalker in a text he
sent her, the papers say.
"Angus(noun): (Victim-2]'s cyberstalker," one text read as if Rowe's code name was a definition from a dictionary.
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Simultaneously, Rowe was hacking into the victim's Facebook, email and Snapchat accounts and would send messages to
the victim's friends with demands that they put Rowe in touch with her.
Rowe also allegedly sent emails to the victim's professors once she was in college that offered to sell nude photos of the
victim and her mom's boyfriend, the complaint states.
He also allegedly called in over 100 fake 911 calls to the victim's address and subjected them to "multiple 'swatting'
incidents" — a harassment tactic abusers use to send SWAT teams or emergency units to a person's home based on a fake
threat — court papers say.
"On multiple occasions, police officers responded to her home in the Bronx, New York — often with guns drawn," the
complaint reads.
"She was once awoken by police officers outside her bedroom door, and found the 'swatting' incidents to be extremely
frightening and upsetting."
The victim and her dad received texts from Rowe that said "if you do not speak up you will be shot and killed by a swat
team," "I do not play games with swatting," "next swatting victim will be courtesy of me" and "they killed a man in
Witchita [sic) Kansas over some swatting."
Rowe was seemingly referring to an Ohio gamer, Tyler R. Barriss, who staged a swatting incident that left a 28-year-old
innocent man named Andrew Finch dead.
The stalker then targeted the victim's high school by calling in "multiple threats," including a bomb threat and an active
shooter threat from a person who identified themselves as "Angus" and demanded they be put in contact with the victim,
the complaint states.
Rowe also allegedly breached the high school's grading system and was caught with homework assignments on his
computer that had the victim's name on it, prosecutors allege.
Investigators tracked Rowe down using IP addresses from his hacks and found him in Smyrna where he admitted to much
of the harassment and was subsequently arrested.
While reviewing computers seized from his home, police determined he'd also hacked into a police department website,
the website for a Bronx hospital and a state law enforcement website.
Prosecutors didn't immediately return a request for comment seeking Rowe's age, which was left out their release and
their criminal complaint.
Securities and Commodities Fraud
Orlean
Ex-CEO From Long Island Sentenced For Scheme To Defraud Victims In Sale Of Worthless Stock
Daily Voice
By Zak Failla
2/13/2020
Hauppauge resident Keith Orlean - also known as "Jack Allen" - was sentenced to 32 months in prison after pleading guilty
in Manhattan federal court.
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Orlean admitted to participating in a scheme targeting elderly persons to solicit purchases of stock using a series of
valueless companies through a variety of lies and misrepresentations.
For several years, Orlean and his co-conspirators operated a fraudulent scheme in which a salesman named "Mike
Palmer" would call elderly people, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Geoffrey Berman said.
The callers offered the victims a "time-sensitive opportunity to buy stock in certain companies," Berman said.
Berman said that there was no "Mike Palmer," and the salesman was one of Orlean's two co-conspirators, who took turns
using the faux alias.
The alleged time-sensitive investments were also fabricated by the three men, and the money went to companies they
controlled.
"In one intercepted phone conversation, a co-conspirator described to Orlean his strategy for a successful investor sales
pitch as: 'You ram it down their (expletive deleted) throat; " Berman said.
"In another intercepted call," Berman added, "upon learning that a particular victim investor died, the co-conspirator
remarked: 'I knew I should have pulled the last $10,000 out of him.' "
According to the FBI, since April 2014, Orlean and his conspirators convinced more than 50 elderly people to purchase
stock in companies based on false representations. In total, they solicited more than $2 million.
Orlean, 62, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud and one count of securities fraud.
In addition to his prison term, Orlean was ordered to pay restitution of $2,080,771 and will forfeit $883,700. He will also
serve three years of supervised probation following his release.
Berman said, "Keith Orlean and his co-conspirators obtained more than $2 million by taking advantage of innocent
investors — many of them elderly — through blatant lies.
As this prosecution and today's sentence reflect, this kind of predatory fraud will not be tolerated."
Money Laundering and Transnational Criminal Enterprises
Haney
Silk Road Dealer Busted In $19M Bitcoin Haul Gets 3% Years
Law360
By Pete Brush
2/12/2020
Law360, New York (February 12, 2020, 7:09 PM EST) -- A Manhattan federal judge sentenced a 61-year-old Ohio
businessman who sold oxycodone on the Silk Road online drug bazaar to 3% years in prison Wednesday after the feds
caught him lying about where he had gotten bitcoins that had surged in value to $19 million.
U.S. District Judge Jed S. Rakoff also hit Hugh Brian Haney, who has forfeited his bitcoin haul, with a $10,000 fine.
Once a successful Westerville, Ohio, toy merchant, Haney, who has already served time for a drug offense, sold oxycodone
on Silk Road's "Pharmville" section in 2011 and 2012. He stopped in 2012 and was not apprehended.
It was not until July when Haney was caught lying to the Coinbase exchange about the provenance of his bitcoins, which
had sharply appreciated in value from about $8,600, as he tried to cash out. Haney was arrested and jailed in July and
pled guilty in November to charges of money laundering and selling property obtained through criminal means.
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Judge Rakoff's sentence came in far below the punishment contemplated by official sentencing guidelines, which the
judge called "absurd" and "totally nuts" on Wednesday. The guidelines called for a prison term of about 17 years.
"This case amply demonstrates how ridiculous they are," Judge Rakoff said.
Haney's lawyer, Martin Cohen, had asked for a prison term of 18 months, citing mitigating conduct including the
defendant's charitable giving and his quick acceptance of responsibility.
Haney told the court that he started selling on Silk Road in the midst of his own opioid addiction, which he said he has
now escaped. He called Silk Road "wrong" and "evil," saying he initially thought he was helping other addicts but quickly
realized he was making a mistake when the now-shuttered site began to "explode" in popularity.
"I do deeply regret what I did," he said. "I just lost all sense of reality."
Haney is at least the fifth person to be sentenced in the United States in connection with the takedown of Silk Road, a
bust that made international headlines in 2013.
The site's founder, Ross Ulbricht, is serving life in prison. Two site operators, Gary Davis and Andrew M. Jones, have been
sentenced to 6% years and 5% years in prison, respectively. Both remain incarcerated. Peter R Nash, a Silk Road site
moderator, got a sentence of time served in 2015.
Another Silk Road defendant, Roger Thomas Clark, awaits sentencing after entering a guilty plea earlier this year.
Prosecutors have characterized Clark as a central figure who worked closely with Ulbricht. He is scheduled to be
sentenced in May by U.S. District Judge William H. Pauley III.
Counsel for Haney declined comment after Wednesday's hearing.
Haney is represented by Martin Cohen of the Federal Defenders of New York Inc.
The government is represented by Samuel Raymond and Tara La Morte of the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern
District of New York.
The case is USA v. Haney, case number 1:19-cr-00541, in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.
General Crimes
Myrie
Man Accused Of Sex Trafficking Minor Sentenced
Patch
By Michael Woyton
2/13/2020
WESTCHESTER COUNTY, NY — A New York man will be spending more than a decade behind bars for sex trafficking a
minor girl. Geoffrey S. Berman, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, said Jermaine Myrie, 35, was
sentenced Thursday by U.S. District Judge Kimba M. Wood to 135 months in prison.
Myrie had previously pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to engage in sex trafficking of a minor.
Berman said Myrie previously admitted to unconscionable conduct involving the exploitation of a minor girl who lived in
the state's social services system.
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"Today's lengthy prison term exemplifies the seriousness of Myrie's crimes against his vulnerable minor victim," he said.
Berman said his office will continue to advocate for the victims of these crimes and urges anyone who might have
information that may be relevant to this investigation to contact the FBI at 1-212-384-1000 or https://tips.fbi.gov.
According to prosecutors and court documents, from January 2016 to April 2016, Myrie, who is also known as "Rapp,"
participated in a conspiracy to engage in sex trafficking and sexual exploitation of a minor victim.
Authorities said he recruited, enticed, harbored, transported, provided, obtained and maintained the victim for the
purpose of commercial sex.
Prior to being trafficked by Myrie, the girl lived at a residential treatment facility located in Westchester County, which
provided housing for at-risk troubled children on behalf of social services for certain counties in the state.
Prosecutors said Myrie recruited the victim by saying he was romantically interested in her. He used Backpage.com, an
online classifieds website, to post ads of the girl for commercial sex.
Myrie sent the child to engage in commercial sex in locations in the Bronx.
He also used physical violence with the girl to discourage her from working for any other pimps, prosecutors said.
In addition to his prison sentence of 11.25 years, Myrie was sentenced to five years of supervised release.
He is the second defendant to be sentenced in this case by Wood for his participation in sex trafficking of minors.
Reuben Sands, who pleaded guilty to conspiracy to violate the Travel Act, was sentenced Dec. 18 to a term of 60 months
in prison.
Berman said this case is part of an ongoing prosecution of 19 defendants accused of sex trafficking at least 20 minor girls
and young adults in the state's social services systems. All 19 have been convicted, either via guilty plea or following trial.
White Plains
Klein
Plea Deals For Rockland Schemers In $14M Yeshiva E-Rate Fraud
Patch
By Lanning Taliaferro
2/13/2020
ROCKLAND COUNTY, NY — Seven people accused of stealing $14 million from the federal E-Rate program using yeshivas in
Rockland County pleaded guilty Thursday. Under a plea deal, they pleaded guilty each to one count of conspiring against
the United States, prosecutors announced.
They must also make restitution totaling $3.3 million.
The Monsey and Spring Valley residents billed the government for telecommunications equipment and services that were
not actually provided to Jewish religious schools and used the money for themselves.
Simon Goldbrener, Ben Klein, Peretz Klein, Susan Klein, Aron Melber, Moshe Schwartz and Sholem Steinberg were
vendors, consultants and yeshiva school officials involved in the fraud. Prosecutors had alleged that between 2009 and
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2016, the schemers applied for $35 million in E-rate funding and received $14 million.
"Each of these defendants has now admitted his or her role in a massive scheme that stole millions of dollars from the E-
Rate program," said Geoffrey S. Berman, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York. "That money
should have been spent to help educate underprivileged children. Instead, it went to line the defendants' pockets. Now
they will answer for their crimes."
In some cases, the ultra-Orthodox school listed on the application would not have allowed its students to use modern
classroom technology. In other cases, the school did receive technology, but the program was over-billed and the
conspirators pocketed the difference.
In one particularly egregious example, the school for which the application was made was a day care center serving 2-4-
year-olds. The school received almost $500,000 for technology including video-conferencing, distance learning and high-
speed internet.
In return for their participation in the scheme, prosecutors allege school officials took freebies including cellphones for
staffers' personal use and security and alarm systems (which are not covered under the program).
The E-Rate program distributes funds to schools and libraries mostly serving economically disadvantaged children, so that
those institutions can afford needed telecommunication services, internet access, and related equipment. More than
30,000 applications from schools and libraries seeking funds to serve economically disadvantaged children were received
each year during the relevant time period; every year, requests for E-Rate funds exceeded funds available.
The Rockland schools never received millions of dollars' worth of the items and services for which the conspirators billed
the E-Rate program. The conspirators who held themselves out as independent consultants working for the schools
actually worked for and were paid by others who controlled vendor companies.
Corporations controlled by the Kleins and Steinberg masqueraded as vendors and requested over $35 million in E-Rate
funds, and received over $14 million in E-Rate funds, from in or about 2010 to in or about 2016. Each has now admitted
that the companies they controlled did not in fact provide much of the equipment for which they billed the federal
government, prosecutors said.
Goldbrener and Schwartz held themselves out as consultants who worked for educational institutions, supposedly helping
schools to participate in the E-Rate program by, among other things, holding a fair and open bidding process to select
cost-effective vendors. They have now admitted that they were in fact paid hundreds of thousands of dollars by the
vendors to complete and file false E-Rate documents that circumvented the bidding process and resulted in the payment
of millions of dollars to the vendors.
Aron Melber was an official at a private religious school in Rockland County, New York, that participated in the E-Rate
program with some of the other conspirators. Melber has now admitted that he filed false certifications with the E-Rate
program, falsely claiming to have obtained authorized E-Rate funded equipment and services from vendors selected
through a fair and open bidding process.
One count of a conspiracy to commit wire fraud carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
PERETZ KLEIN, 66, of Spring Valley, New York, pled guilty before United States Magistrate Judge Judith McCarthy.
He was charged initially with Conspiracy to commit wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1349 (one count), which
carries a sentence of up to 20 years in prison, and Wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343 and 2 (one count):
20 years in prison. As part of his plea agreement, Peretz Klein also agreed to forfeit $1,144,288.37, and to pay
restitution of the same amount. Peretz Klein is scheduled to be sentenced by Judge Karas on June 17.
SUSAN KLEIN, 59, of Spring Valley, New York. She was charged initially with Conspiracy to commit wire fraud, in
violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1349 (one count): 20 years in prison; and Wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343 and
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2 (one count): 20 years in prison. As part of her plea agreement, Susan Klein also agreed to forfeit $1,144,288.37,
and to pay restitution of the same amount. Susan Klein is scheduled to be sentenced by Judge Karas on June 17.
SIMON GOLDBRENER, 57, of Monsey, New York, pled guilty on Feb. 3, before United States Magistrate Judge Paul
E. Davison. He had been charged initially with Conspiracy to commit wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1349
(one count): 20 years in prison; and Wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343 and 2 (three counts): 20 years in
prison per count. As part of his plea agreement, Goldbrener also agreed to forfeit $479,357.18, and to pay
restitution of the same amount. Goldbrener is scheduled to be sentenced by Judge Karas on June 8.
MOSHE SCHWARTZ, 46, of Monsey, New York, pled guilty on February 6, 2020, before Judge Davison. He was
charged initially with Conspiracy to commit wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1349 (one count): 20 years in
prison; and Wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343 and 2 (one count): 20 years in prison. As part of his plea
agreement, Schwartz also agreed to forfeit $275,160.00, and to pay restitution of the same amount. Schwartz is
scheduled to be sentenced by Judge Karas on June 8, 2020.
BEN KLEIN, 41, of Monsey, New York, pled guilty on Jan. 24, before United States Magistrate Judge Lisa Margaret
Smith. He was sentenced initially to Conspiracy to commit wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1349 (one count):
20 years in prison; and to Wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343 and 2 (one count): 20 years in prison. As
part of his plea agreement, Ben Klein also agreed to forfeit $412,586.37, and to pay restitution of the same
amount. Ben Klein is scheduled to be sentenced by Judge Karas on May 22.
SHOLEM STEINBERG, 41, of Monsey, New York, pled guilty on Jan. 30, before Judge McCarthy. He was charged
initially with Conspiracy to commit wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1349 (one count): 20 years in prison; and
Wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343 and 2 (two counts): 20 years in prison per count. As part of his plea
agreement, Steinberg also agreed to forfeit $191,423.50, and to pay restitution of the same amount. Steinberg is
scheduled to be sentenced by Judge Karas on May 12.
ARON MELBER, 44, of Monsey, New York, pled guilty on Jan. 30, before Judge McCarthy. He was charged initially
with Conspiracy to commit wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1349 (one count): 20 years in prison; and Wire
fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1343 and 2 (one count): 20 years in prison. As part of his plea agreement,
Melber also agreed to forfeit $127,654.55, and to pay restitution of the same amount. Melber is scheduled to be
sentenced by Judge Karas on May 8.
The Journal News, the Rockland County Times and Jewish news organizations had reported in 2013 on the amount of
money from the E-rate program going to ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities, which usually forbid their students to access
the internet.
Berman thanked the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Federal Communications Commission - Office of the Inspector
General, and the Rockland County District Attorney's Office for their outstanding work on the investigation. This case is
being handled by the Office's White Plains Division. Assistant United States Attorneys Michael D. Maimin, Hagan Scotten,
and Vladislav Vainberg are in charge of the prosecution.
Matters of Interest
Stone
This is a revolting assault on the fragile rule of law
The Washington Post
By Chuck Rosenberg
2/12/2020
Something extraordinary and deeply troubling happened at — and to — the Justice Department this week. Four federal
prosecutors properly, and as a matter of conscience, withdrew from the Roger Stone case. They had shepherded that case
through the criminal-justice system but in an alarming development were ordered to disavow a sentencing
recommendation they filed with the federal judge overseeing the matter.
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Their original recommendation — asking the judge to sentence Stone within the range set by the U.S. Federal Sentencing
Guidelines for the offenses for which Stone was convicted at trial — was a perfectly ordinary filing. It is the type of
pleading filed in federal courts by federal prosecutors every day. Certainly, when a defendant is convicted at trial, it is
routine for prosecutors to suggest to the judge that he be sentenced within a prescribed range — the result of a
cumbersome sentencing guidelines calculation that is often debated between the parties and adjudicated by the court.
Of course, the filing was just a recommendation to the judge, who has ample authority to sentence Stone within that
range — or above it or below it — as she determines. Prosecutors do not sentence defendants; judges do. So how did
something so ordinary become so extraordinary?
First, some background. The Justice Department that I know and love — and in which I worked for two decades in many
roles — must always be two things to the public it serves: fair and perceived as fair. These are related but distinct
concepts. Our work must be fair — that is, we must have fair outcomes as a matter of practice and principle. Anything less
is unacceptable, which is one reason, for instance, we turned over exculpatory evidence (a constitutional obligation) and
why we publicly fronted our mistakes when we made them.
But our work must also be perceived as fair. Fair outcomes are not worth much if the public does not perceive those
outcomes as fair. One way, among many, we ensure that is to assiduously avoid politics in our work. When I was a career
federal prosecutor in Virginia, my colleagues and I simply did not talk about politics. I did not know then, and I largely do
not know now, how my colleagues (including the federal agents with whom we worked) voted or even if they voted. It
simply did not matter to our work. Folks did not talk about it. It was irrelevant to our work. We knew that unwritten rule.
Whatever our view, we kept it to ourselves, because it had no place in our world and because letting it seep in would
corrode our work. We worked free of political interference or influence. Always.
Until now, apparently. What happened? Following the routine filing by the career prosecutors — in line with the
sentencing guidelines applicable to the Stone case — the president inexplicably tweeted that the sentence Stone faced
was a "miscarriage" of justice, calling it a "horrible and very unfair situation."
And then — and this is the part that is so disturbing — the prosecutors were ordered, either because of the president's
tweet or irrespective of it (and both scenarios are awful), to rescind their original recommendation and to ask the judge
that Stone receive more lenient treatment at his sentencing. What the prosecutors were ordered to do was dangerous
and unsettling and undermined everything they — and we — stood for as Justice Department professionals. They
properly refused.
We all understand that the leadership at the top of the department is politically appointed, and we make peace with that
(in addition to my work as a career federal prosecutor, I served in political positions under Presidents George W. Bush and
Barack Obama in the Justice Department and worked for thoughtful appointed leaders of both parties), but being asked
by that leadership to allow politics to corrode our work is not remotely normal or permissible. And it is treacherous.
The rule of law is a construct. It was made by people — and is nurtured and preserved by people. It can also be destroyed
by people. And unlike the law of gravity, which works everywhere and all the time (at least on this planet), the rule of law
is precious and fragile. As citizens and prosecutors, we either safeguard it or we surrender it. That's the choice. What
political leadership did here — mandating a favor for a friend of the president in line with the president's publicly
expressed desire in the case — significantly damages the rule of law and the perception of Justice Department fairness.
Principled resignations by career federal prosecutors highlighted this dangerous stunt. I am proud of them for that.
But I find it revolting that they were pushed into that corner (one resigned his job; three others resigned from the case)
and saddened by their sacrifice. This is not normal and it is not right,and it is dangerous territory for the rule of law.
Safeguard or surrender. You choose.
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Barr pushes back against Trump's criticism of Justice Dept., says tweets 'make it impossible for me to do my job'
The Washington Post
By Devlin Barrett and Matt Zapotosky
2/13/2020
Attorney General William R Barr pushed back hard Thursday against President Trump's criticism of the Justice
Department, saying, "I'm not going to be bullied or influenced by anybody."
In an interview with ABC News, Barr said the president's highly critical tweets aimed at the department "make it
impossible for me to do my job."
Barr said he was prepared to accept the consequences of speaking out against the president.
"I cannot do my job here at the department with a constant background commentary that undercuts me," the attorney
general said.
Barr has faced growing scrutiny since Tuesday, when four prosecutors handling the case of President Trump's longtime
friend Roger Stone withdrew from the proceedings amid a dispute over how long he should spend in prison.
In a Monday court filing, the four prosecutors had recommended a prison sentence of seven to nine years, following
extensive debate beforehand with their supervisors in the D.C. U.S. Attorney's Office.
Trump reacted angrily, tweeting Tuesday: "This is a horrible and very unfair situation. The real crimes were on the other
side, as nothing happens to them. Cannot allow this miscarriage of justice!"
A senior Justice Department official claimed department leadership was "shocked" at the first recommendation and felt a
need to correct it. Later Tuesday, more senior Justice Department officials called the recommendation of seven to nine
years excessive, and a new filing was made to the court suggesting it would be more fair to give Stone three to four years
in prison.
The new sentencing recommendation — signed by the interim U.S. attorney for D.C., Timothy Shea, and a different career
prosecutor — said the previous guidance "could be considered excessive and unwarranted under the circumstances."
Shea, a former close adviser to Barr at Justice Department headquarters, was installed at the U.S. Attorney's Office last
month.
Stone was convicted by a jury in November of obstructing Congress and witness intimidation, and prosecutors said he lied
to protect Trump.
Prosecutors and defense lawyers can only make recommendations about prison sentences; Stone is scheduled to be
sentenced Feb. 20 by U.S. District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson.
Kerri Kupec, a Justice Department spokeswoman, has said the agency decided before Trump's Tuesday tweet to revise the
sentencing recommendation, and that there were no discussions between the White House and Justice Department
about Stone's case in the days leading up to the prosecutors' guidance.
Current and former Justice Department officials have expressed alarm about the sequence of events, questioning whether
the department under Barr has bent to the president's whim on a high-profile case filed by former special counsel Robert
S. Mueller III as part of his investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.
On Wednesday, Trump praised the department's change of course and singled out Barr specifically.
"Congratulations to Attorney General Bill Barr for taking charge of a case that was totally out of control and perhaps
should not have even been brought," Trump wrote on Twitter. "Evidence now clearly shows that the Mueller Scam was
improperly brought & tainted."
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Democrats called earlier this week for the inspector general to investigate the dispute surrounding Stone's sentence
recommendation.
Democrat won't rule out new Trump impeachment over Roger Stone ca
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