Sunday, December 30, 2012

Happy New Year!

I just wanted to wish everyone a happy and healthy new year and thank everyone for stopping by and reading, and for sending tips.

The District changed quite a bit this year and will continue to undergo a transformation in 2013. Should be fun to watch -- and blog about.




Thursday, December 27, 2012

Best posts of 2012

Kyle Swenson of the New Times covers local blogs' best posts here, including SDFLA.

I picked the posts about Judge Jordan's confirmation process.  The blog gets lots of traffic when there are posts about new judges and magistrates (thanks to all my tipsters, who get me this information quickly and before the main stream media), and Judge Jordan's confirmation process seemed to get the most attention, including lots of hits from the court family (judges, clerk's office, prosecutors, and defenders) and nationally.


We should have a bunch of new judges to discuss in 2013...

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

"[The] president’s most enduring legacy."

That's what Federal Public Defender Michael Caruso said about the appointment of judges in Jay Weaver's article about "the new generation" of appointees.

There's some good stuff in the article, including Judge Scola joking that he wished he was "king of the world." I'm not sure there is anything closer than being an Article III judge....

Here's a photo from the article from C.W. Griffin:

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Mixed verdicts in B-Girls trial

Three of the four were found guilty of some counts and one was found NG across the board. The Herald coverage is here:
Miami federal jury convicted Stanislav Pavlenko, Albert Takhalov and Isaac Feldman of fleecing hundreds of thousands of dollars from dozens of male customers by racking up bogus bills for champagne, vodka and caviar on their credit cards at Russian-style clubs on Washington Avenue.
A fourth defendant, Siavash Zargari, who did business with Takhalov, was acquitted.
The jury reached its unanimous verdicts on a variety of conspiracy, wire fraud and money-laundering charges after deliberating for five days after an 11-week trial before U.S. District Judge Robert Scola that zigged and zagged with tales about Miami Beach’s underground bar scene. Scola ordered the three convicted men into custody immediately because he found that they gave testimony “I don’t believe was honest.’’ His decision prompted loud wails and crying by relatives in the courtroom. Court security officers had to separate the defendants from their loved ones.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/12/20/3150589/bar-girls-federal-trial-in-miami.html#storylink=misearch#storylink=cpy

Borked

RIP Robert Bork.  Here are some of the highlights (lowlights?) from the confirmation hearing:


Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Escape!

Two bank-robbers escaped from a federal lockup facility in Chicago through those little slits as windows (4 inches wide) 15 floors up.  Pretty crazy.  From the Chicago Tribune:

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Be civil

Have you seen the joint resolution of 42 South Florida Voluntary Bar Associations and six chief judges in South Florida (federal and state) regarding lawyer civility?  Check it out here:

The South Florida VBAs jointly resolve that they shall work together to actively promote the Oath of Civility and adherence to accepted standards of professional courtesy across the South Florida VBAs’ respective counties;
The South Florida VBAs hereby resolve to jointly promote the above through a series of articles, seminars, membership lunches, press releases, and correspondence directed to members and non-members of the South Florida VBAs’ respective counties; and
The South Florida VBAs, through their respective Officers, Boards of Directors, and Professionalism Committees, shall work with the Chief Judges of South Florida’s courts to promote the above in a manner most likely to improve civility awareness and adherence to accepted standards of professional courtesy.
The South Florida VBAs resolve to promote the Oath of Civility and adherence to accepted standards of professional courtesy to attorneys appearing before the state and federal courts, government agencies, arbitrators and other quasi-judicial forums throughout South Florida.


Good stuff; I think the "civil" lawyers need it more than the criminal lawyers. 

I particularly like the footnote:  "The Addendum shall be a living document that will be intermittently updated as additional bar associations pledge their approval of this Joint Resolution."

In other district news, Claudio Osorio stipulated to pretrial detention yesterday.  The case is before Judge Altonaga so he won't have to wait too long for a trial (or plea).  Here's Jay Weaver's coverage of the case:

Claudio Osorio once lived in a Star Island mansion overlooking Biscayne Bay.
Today the accused international con man remains stuck in a tiny jail cell in downtown Miami.
Arrested earlier this month, Osorio is awaiting trial on federal charges accusing him of fleecing $50 million from investors and the U.S. government.
Osorio’s defense attorney, Orlando do Campo, said Monday his client chose not to challenge the government’s position that he should be held without bail, citing a recent problem in his bankruptcy case. Osorio, 54, is being held in the Federal Detention Center in downtown Miami.
Magistrate Judge Jonathan Goodman originally granted Osorio a $1 million bond, including a $100,000 deposit to be made by his mother-in-law who lives in his native Venezuela. But the judge put it on hold so that a federal prosecutor, a bankruptcy trustee and Osorio’s bankruptcy lawyer could address a dispute over the source of the defendant’s funds.
The bankruptcy trustee is seeking to have Osorio found in contempt of court for allegedly forging a letter from a Canadian bank that purportedly claimed it had turned over all financial records related to his defunct company, InnoVida Holdings.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/12/17/3146527/accused-swindler-claudio-osorio.html#storylink=cpy