Tuesday, June 27, 2006

New lawyer for Narseal Batiste

Assistant Federal Defender John Wylie is now representing Narseal Batiste, the supposed leader of the terrorist suspects. I've known John Wylie for a long time -- he's a *great* lawyer.

Friday, June 23, 2006

Lawyers for the terror suspects...


Larry Lebowitz of the Miami Herald will be reporting that the lawyers for terror suspects are:

Tony Natale* (Federal Public Defender) for Narseal Batiste (the supposed leader)
Albert Levin for Patrick Abraham
Nathan Clark for Rotschild Augustine
Richard Houlihan for Naudimar Herrera
Gregory Prebish for Burson Augustin

At the hearing, the U.S. Attorney's office objected to the Federal Defender's appointment saying that the office was already representing a witness. Magistrate Judge Patrick White took the parties sidebar and explained that for now the PD's office would be appointed and if a conflict was later proven, both sides could deal with it. The other lawyers on the case are all appointed from the criminal justice act panel.

*Natale is part of the Padilla team. By mentioning Padilla, I've now done what I was complaining about earlier...

Terror indictment

The Sears tower terror case has been indicted in the Southern District of Florida in front of Judge Joan Lenard. Here is the indictment. And here is Judge Lenard's background.

Thursday, June 22, 2006

Terror arrests in Miami

Lots of coverage tonight on the alleged terrorists arrested in the Southern District of Florida. Now the question is whether they will be charged and tried here or in some other district...
Also, does is strike you as strange that every article is mentioning that Jose Padilla is awaiting trial in Miami? There is no alleged connection with these arrests and Padilla so why does every single article mention him?

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

HEAT HEAT HEAT!!

Wow. Unbelievable. We've been waiting for this for so long. So happy for them... especially Zo. When he blocks a shot, it's better than 5 baskets. Wade is beyond words. Shaq delivers on his promise. UD comes up big. Payton's huge shots. Walker's 3rd quarter. Clutch Posey... And how about Riley.

So many great story lines.

Everyone in Miami is dragging a little today from the last 2 months of playoff hoops. But it is such a happy tired feeling... What a great year.

Sorry for rambling.

If the Heat isn't your thing, and you need Southern District news, check out this Padilla report in the Herald (concerning Judge Cooke granting some pre-trial motions for the defense) and a lengthy article about his co-defendant Adham Hassoun in the Daily Business Review.

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Abramoff, Kidan get 3 month surrender extension

So reports the AP here. They are in full cooperation mode. I have to imagine that there are a number of nervous congressmen.

Sunday, June 18, 2006

Two new state judges

Congrats to two colleagues -- Reemberto Diaz and Barbara Lagoa. Jeb Bush appointed Reemberto to serve as a state trial judge and Barbara to serve as a state appellate judge. I have tried cases with Reemberto Diaz and have had cases with Barbara Lagoa and believe they will make fantastic judges. Below is the Miami Herald squib with the background on both. I wish both of them well. The criminal defense bar will miss Reemberto and the U.S. Attorney's office will miss Barbara Lagoa. Congratulations again to both.

BUSH APPOINTS LAGOA, DIAZ TO BENCH

Gov. Jeb Bush appointed Assistant U.S. Attorney Barbara Lagoa to the Third District Court of Appeal and Miami attorney Reemberto Diaz to the Circuit Court on Friday.

Lagoa, 38, of Coral Gables, will be the first Cuban-American woman to serve on the 11-member appellate court for Miami-Dade and Monroe counties. She fills a vacancy created by the resignation of Judge David Levy.

Prior to joining the U.S. Attorney's Office in 2003, Lagoa was in private practice at the law firm of Greenberg Traurig. She is a graduate of Florida International University with a law degree from Columbia University.

Diaz, 49, of Coral Gables, is filling a vacancy created by the death of Circuit Judge Henry Leyte-Vidal. Diaz is in private practice. He is a graduate of the University of Miami, with a law degree from Nova Southeastern University.

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Bomb squad


Julie Kay reports today that there was bomb scare at the federal courthouse. The article is below. Anyone know what case this is?

When police blew up a suspicious box that caused the evacuation of two federal buildings in downtown Miami, they may have blown up a federal criminal case. Authorities evacuated the courthouses Monday due to a bomb scare.
The Miami Police bomb squad responded and destroyed the box, but it may have contained evidence from a just-decided case. The James Lawrence King Federal Justice Building and the David W. Dyer Federal Building both were evacuated at about 2:30 p.m. for an hour or so on Monday. Hundreds of attorneys and courthouse staffers were ushered out of the buildings by federal marshals wearing yellow vests. They were directed to the street in front of the Federal Detention Center while the bomb squad did its work. Federal judges and magistrates were taken out of the building separately and taken to an undisclosed location.
“A special robot went over to the box, and it went kaboom,” said Mark Schnapp, a partner at Greenberg Traurig in Miami who was at the U.S. attorney’s office when the building was evacuated. But according to two lawyers who were present during the bomb scare and did not want to be named, it turned out that the box contained papers and evidence left on the sidewalk by a federal agent.
The two lawyers said the evidence was from a criminal case in which a verdict had just been reached. That evidence included fake guns and wiretap equipment. Lt. Bill Schwartz, a spokesman for the Miami Police Department, confirmed that the box left between the Miami Dade College campus and the James Lawrence King courthouse contained papers. But he said he had no details about the nature of the papers or who left them there. “Someone accidentally put something down,” Schwartz said. “We felt the need to evacuate the buildings.”
Alberto Hidalgo, a spokesman for the U.S. Marshals Service in Miami, confirmed that the box was blown up by the police bomb squad but said he had no information about what was in the box. Matt Dates, a spokesman for U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta, declined to comment on what the box contained. “We don’t talk about security matters,” he said. If the box did contain evidence in the criminal case, it’s unclear how the loss of the evidence may affect any appeal. Some observers found humor in the situation. “That’s smoking-gun evidence,” said Miami criminal defense attorney David O. Markus, “just not in the way that the agent was hoping for.”