1. The blog broke the news yesterday of the 4 nominees from the JNC for the federal bench. Two of these nominees will be selected as our next federal judges:
Beth Bloom, Darrin Gayles, Peter Lopez, John Thornton
2. Meantime, Judge Will Thomas' nomination is still being held up by Sen. Marco Rubio.
A rally on his behalf was held this morning at the federal courthouse.
3. Claudio Osorio was sentenced to 12 1/2 years in prison.
4. "Grotesque prosecutorial misconduct" leads to a new trial. This time it's from New Orleans.
Via CNN:
Jury selection was minutes away for five
ex-New Orleans police officers accused of shooting unarmed civilians
after Hurricane Katrina when a commenter ripped into the defendants on a
newspaper website.
"NONE of these guys
should had have [sic] ever been given a badge," the commenter,
identified only as "legacyusa," wrote. "We should research how they got
on the police department, who trained them, who supervised them and why
were they ever been promoted. You put crap in -- you get crap out!!!"
"Legacyusa" turned out to
be one of the top federal prosecutors in New Orleans. His post was just
one of many anonymous barbs that led a federal judge Tuesday to throw
out the convictions of those ex-cops in the
Danziger Bridge shootings, which left two people dead and four seriously wounded.
In a 129-page ruling,
District Judge Kurt D. Engelhardt cited long list of "egregious and
inflammatory" comments by at least three Justice Department officials
using a variety of online identities. Those comments fueled a "21st
century carnival atmosphere" that tainted the 2011 trial and will
require a new one, Engelhardt wrote.
"This case started as one
featuring allegations of brazen abuse of authority, violation of the
law and corruption of the criminal justice system; unfortunately, though
the focus has switched from the accused to the accusers, it has
continued to be about those very issues," the order states. "After much
reflection, the court cannot journey as far as it has in this case only
to ironically accept grotesque prosecutorial misconduct in the end."
In a statement issued
Tuesday afternoon, the Justice Department said, "We are disappointed
with the court's ruling. We are reviewing the decision and considering
our options."
Seems like a strange reaction from DOJ. Why do they defense misconduct?
5. Locally, bond was denied this morning in a case involving Iran, uranium, African mines, and ICE.
From Curt Anderson:
A
West African man was ordered jailed Thursday until trial on U.S.
charges that he attempted to broker an illegal deal to ship tons of
uranium ore from Sierra Leone to Iran, including a trip to the U.S. with
uranium ore samples concealed in shoes inside his luggage.
Patrick Campbell,
33, faces a maximum of 20 years behind bars and up to $1 million in
fines if convicted of attempting to violate the U.S. embargo against
Iran. A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
affidavit filed in federal court says Campbell claimed he could supply
enough ore — commonly known as yellowcake — to yield 1,000 tons of
purified uranium that could be used for nuclear fuel or weapons.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Barry Seltzer
agreed with prosecutors at a hearing that Campbell should not be
released on bail, although a trial date has not been set. Campbell is
scheduled to enter a plea next week.