The SDFLA Blog is dedicated to providing news and notes regarding federal practice in the Southern District of Florida. The New Times calls the blog "the definitive source on South Florida's federal court system." All tips on court happenings are welcome and will remain anonymous. Please email David Markus at dmarkus@markuslaw.com
SFL is covering the Emmanuel Roy case before Judge Turnoff and this letter. SFL highlights this line: "I trust that the court will not conclude that I have decided to stump
my nose at it, for any party who does so does it as his own peril." Too funny.
Q. What was your first job?
I worked as a bag boy and stock man at Winn Dixie while in High School at LaSalle high. Q. What advice would you give to today’s law students?
Find and pursue your passion. Q. What’s the last book you read.
“The last Boy,” a biography about Mickey Mantle.
The 11th Circuit is in town, and I have an argument tomorrow morning, so I'll be off-line until after that...
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/07/23/v-fullstory/2907544/miami-lawyer-ervin-gonzalez-tackles.html#storylink=cpy
The former leader ofU.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcementin South
Florida has gone from spearheading the local fight against child
pornography to facing at least five years in prison for transmitting
sexually explicit images of children.
Anthony V. Mangione, 51, pleaded guilty Friday morning to a child pornography charge in the shocking case against the former ICE
chief who once oversaw investigations of countless predators who
exploited children. The 27-year law enforcement veteran was brought down
the same way as many of those other defendants: an Internet provider
flagged files being sent from Mangione's email account and alerted
authorities.
***
Federal prosecutors said Mangione transmitted at least 15 images of
children between the ages of 3 and 15 years old with their genitals
exposed.
According toBroward Sheriff's Officesearch warrants, his
suspicious Internet activity dated back to 2003 with Mangione using a
multitude of online screen names in recent years, including
thismomspanks33 and PastorRobertM.
Mangione had no visible
supporters in the courtroom Friday morning. He arrived at the West Palm
Beach federal courthouse with his attorney, David Howard.
He
answered U.S. Magistrate Judge James Hopkins' questions in a clear,
steady voice. After the hearing, he took off his suit jacket, tie and
belt, and held his hands out to be handcuffed by two U.S. marshals.
Piers Morgan had Justice Scalia on last night and Hannity landed George Zimmerman. Must see TV for law nerds!
Scalia had lots of interesting things to say, and I liked how Morgan pushed him a bit. Scalia said he is most proud that the Court doesn't really cite legislative history anymore and that he has helped move the Court to focus on just the text of the statute or Constitution. Yet earlier in the interview, he said that he frequently reads the Federalist Papers to see what the Framers intended. I'm not sure why the Federalist Papers are an okay source for intent, but legislative history is not...
Asked by CNN’s Piers Morgan whether he and Chief Justice Roberts “have had a parting of the ways, gone from best buddies to warring enemies,” Justice Scalia first ducked the question.
“Who told you that?” he asked.
Mr. Morgan cited news reports, prompting Justice Scalia to respond: “You should not believe what you read about the court in the newspapers. It’s either been made up or been given to the newspapers by somebody who’s violating a confidence, which means that person is not reliable.”
After protesting that he would not talk about internal matters, Justice Scalia relented. “No, I haven’t had a falling out with Justice Roberts,” he said. Asked whether there had been loud words or slammed doors, he said, “No, no, nothing like that.”
More generally, Justice Scalia said his colleagues had good personal relationships even as they disagreed on legal matters. That is consistent with reports from other justices.
“There are clashes on legal questions but not personally,” he said. “The press likes to paint us as nine scorpions in a bottle, and that’s just not the case at all.”
The assault happened while Mr. Zimmerman tried to pull his cellphone
out, he said. Mr. Zimmerman said he had yelled “help” repeatedly, hoping
that the police would hear him. After he shot Mr. Martin, he said, he
was “terrified” and nervous the police might shoot him if they saw him
with a gun.
Mr. O’Mara said the state’s stand-your-ground self-defense law was
appropriate for the case. The law permits people who fear great bodily
injury or death at someone else’s hands to use lethal force to defend
themselves.
Mr. Zimmerman said he had volunteered to take lie detector tests and
voice tests, which he said he had passed. “I didn’t have anything to
hide,” he said.
The interview ended with Mr. Zimmerman apologizing to the Martin family,
and to America for any racial polarization the shooting may have
caused.
To Mr. Martin’s family, “I would tell them again that I’m sorry,” he
said, adding: “I am sorry they buried their child. I can’t imagine what
it must feel like, and I pray for them daily.”
The one on the left is the real "Odalisque in Red Pants" and the one on the right was a fake on display Sofia Imber Contemporary Art Museum of Caracas, Venezuela. According to the USAO press release Marcuello Guzman and Ornelas Lazo were arrested today:
According to the affidavit filed in support
of the criminal complaint, this case was the result of an FBI undercover
investigation. According to the allegations in the complaint affidavit,
Marcuello negotiated the sale of the Matisse painting, which had been previously
stolen from the Caracas Museum of Contemporary Art (Museo de Arte Contemporaneo
de Caracas (MACCSI)) in Caracas, Venezuela in December 2002. The painting is
valued at approximately $3 million. Marcuello allegedly admitted to the
undercover agents during a meeting that he knew the painting was stolen and
offered to sell the stolen painting for approximately $740,000.00. As part of
the negotiations, Marcuello further agreed to have the painting transported by
courier to the United States from Mexico, where the painting was being stored.
The courier was subsequently identified as co-defendant Ornelas.
According to the affidavit, on July 16, 2012, Ornelas
arrived at the Miami International Airport from Mexico City, Mexico,
hand-carrying a red tube containing the painting. On July 17, 2012, defendants
Marcuello and Ornelas met with undercover agents and produced the Matisse
painting titled “Odalisque in Red Pants” from inside the red tube. Upon
inspection by the undercover agents, the painting appeared consistent with the
original Henri Matisse painting reported stolen from the MACCSI museum. At the
conclusion of the meeting, Marcuello and Ornelas were arrested.
Waivers are a common but largely hidden element of plea bargains —
which, in many federal cases, aren’t really bargains because the power
of prosecutors is often so much greater than that of the defendants or
their lawyers. The process is closer to coercion. Prosecutors regularly
“overcharge” defendants with a more serious crime than what actually
occurred. The defendants must then choose between the risk of being
found guilty at trial and getting a longer sentence than the alleged
crime would warrant or a guilty plea in exchange for a lighter sentence.
All but a tiny minority of defendants take the plea as the price of
avoiding the crapshoot of a trial.
Some standard parts of waivers are outrageous,
keeping defendants from appealing even if they become convinced that
they received inadequate counsel to accept a defective plea agreement
where the sentence was not lighter or where the prosecutor wrongly
withheld evidence. Any defense lawyer or prosecutor who asks a defendant
to sign a waiver ruling out appeals on those grounds is protecting
himself.
An important element of justice is missing even when the defendant and
the government believe a plea bargain is fair and when an appeal waiver
is narrow so the defendant can appeal about certain specified issues.
Congress gave appeals courts the power to review federal sentences to
ensure the government applies the law reasonably and consistently.
Without an appeals court’s policing, the odds go up that prosecutors
will do neither. Our system of pleas then looks more like a system of
railroading.
I wish I had something exciting to blog about this Monday morning...
I could try to tie in Miami by discussing how great the traffic is compared to, say, DC:
The usually punctual Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) had some choice words for District of Columbia leaders this week, when he blamed their policies for making his 11-mile commute to Capitol Hill last an hour and 40 minutes on Wednesday. "We go through a city that will spend millions of dollars and enforce parking meters and get fines, and pay for speed cameras which mainly make out of town companies rich, and so on," Leahy said after arriving about 10 minutes late to a 9:30 a.m. hearing. "But they can't coordinate their street lights when their street lights are broken." Leahy, while pouring himself water on the dais of the Senate Judiciary Committee, didn't say where he was driving from or what roads he took. But he observed that "the main thoroughfares have a green light that will go on for one second and go 10 minutes red."
That prompted Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) to joke: "Aren't you sure the problem probably is that they purposely don’t coordinate?"
Or compare the 11th Circuit conference to the 9th Circuit, which was planning a $1 million affair in Hawaii until Congress got wind of it:
Political controversy persists over a conference planned for federal judges on Maui, with two Republican senators calling for the event to be canceled or at least scaled back.
Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama and Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, who have been questioning the need to hold the August conference at a "far-flung island paradise," sent another letter Friday to the chief judge of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
"During this time of extraordinary debt, and given the history of opulence — including repeated trips to the Hawaiian Islands — we believe you should cancel the million-dollar conference," the letter said. "Failing that, ample opportunities to scale back costs at this event and at future conferences remain."
After that letter, the Circuit cancelled the conference. Maybe they should call Adam Rabin to plan the next one.
But those comparisons seem like too much of a stretch. The District is quiet.... Maybe we'll hear some exciting news today. Send me your tips!
Where a sentencing court addresses the factors set out in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a) and imposes a sentence within the statutory maximum, this court’s precedent teaches deference to that judgment on any variance above the Guideline range, no matter how large. See, e.g., United States v. Shaw, 560 F.3d 1230, 1241 (11th Cir. 2009) (upholding a 120-month sentence representing a 224 percent upward variance from the maximum Guideline sentence); United States v. Amedeo, 487 F.3d 823, 834 (11th Cir. 2007) (upholding a 120-month sentence representing a 161 percent upward variance); United States v. Turner, 474 F.3d 1265, 1281 (11th Cir. 2007) (upholding a 240-month sentence representing a 281 percent upward variance). Indeed, in all the cases decided by this court since United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220, 125 S. Ct. 738 (2005), I have found none in which we vacated an upward variance from the Sentencing Guidelines on reasonableness grounds. For this reason, even though Mr. Early’s sentence of 210-months imprisonment represents a 116 percent variance above the 97-month sentence set by the top of his Guideline range and a remarkable 169 percent increase from the 78-month sentence requested by the government itself, I cannot say the panel’s decision here is contrary to our precedent.
At the same time, I write separately to note that this Court has declined to exercise similar deference toward a sentencing court’s decision to grant a downward variance. See, e.g., United States v. Jayyousi, 657 F.3d 1085, 1118–19 (11th Cir. 2011) (holding that a 42 percent downward variance was substantively unreasonable); United States v. Irey, 612 F.3d 1160, 1196 (11th Cir. 2010) (en banc) (same); United States v. Pugh, 515 F.3d 1179, 1203 (11th Cir. 2008) (holding that a 100 percent downward variance was substantively unreasonable). This, even where the extent of the variance from the Guideline range was far smaller and where the reasons given by the sentencing court were more substantial.
My reading of these cases tells me that in considering sentences above the Guideline range, we look only to whether the sentencing court seemed to consider the § 3553(a) factors and we ignore whether the court might have disregarded one of the factors or weighed the factors in an unreasonable way. In contrast, for downward variances, we show no such deference and instead scrutinize how a sentencing court applied each and every § 3553(a) factor. We even go so far as to decide for ourselves whether the factors were weighed correctly. See Irey, 612 F.3d at 1196–1225; Pugh, 515 F.3d at 1194–1203.
And Judge Martin finishes like this:
In sum, even though our case law purportedly requires “a significant justification” to support a “major departure” from the Guidelines, see Pugh, 515 F.3d at 1201, the panel’s review of Mr. Early’s 116 percent upward variance evinces little indication that such a requirement even applies here. Absent correction, I fear this Court’s different approach for reviewing up and down sentence variances may erode public trust in our work.
One of the cases that Martin cites is Jayyousi, which is the co-defendant's name in Jose Padilla's case. There, the 11th Circuit found that the district court's below guideline sentence was unreasonable and cert was just denied. But, the case is far from over. Check out this article about the DoD report explaining how Padilla was tricked into believing that the feds injected him with truth serum:
In 2006, a lawyer for Jose Padilla, the accused dirty-bomb plotter,
made an explosive claim in a federal court filing: the "enemy combatant"
was "given drugs against his will, believed to be some form of lysergic
acid diethylamide (LSD) or phencyclidine (PCP), to act as a sort of
truth serum during his interrogations."
But what Seymour failed to disclose, reported here for the first
time, was that Padilla was given the flu shot during an interrogation
session and told by his interrogators the injection was "truth serum,"
according to a declassified Department of Defense (DoD) inspector
general's report that probed the use of "mind-altering drugs" during the
interrogation of war on terror detainees.
Sanford Seymour, the technical director of the US Naval brig in South
Carolina where Padilla was held, however, vehemently denied the charge
during a 2006 hearing to determine whether Padilla, a US citizen, was
competent to stand trial. Seymour asserted Padilla was injected with an
influenza vaccine.
The inspector general's investigation determined that although
Padilla was not administered mind-altering drugs (such as LSD), "the
incorporation of a routine flu shot into an interrogation session ...
was a deliberate ruse by the interrogation team, intended to convince
[redacted] he had been administered a mind-altering drug."
Looks like everyone is gonna be dragging this morning after those loud storms woke us in the middle of the night. Some news and notes for this rainy day:
1. The Herald supports Judge Cooke's ruling in the Docs vs. Glocks case and urges the Governor not to appeal.
2. The 11th Circuit decides a Stolen Valor case (in this unpublished opinion, USA v. Amster) right after the Court rules. The opinion basically says -- we have to follow the Court's holding that the Act is unconstitutional but we can still affirm the false statement convictions under other statutes.
3. AUSA Lynn Rosenthal is now a Circuit judge in Broward (via DBR).
4. A defendant calls the former US Attorney in Chicago a "rooster with no nuts." (via Main Justice)