Philadelphia Criminal Defense Lawyer Blog

Entries from June 2008

Keeping The UK Safe From Fusty Purveyors Of Household Goods

June 21, 2008 · Leave a Comment

It appears that Martha Stewart has been denied entry to the United Kingdom, presumably because she is a convicted felon, having been found guilty, and having served jail time, for obstruction of justice. Aspokesman for the cabinet ministry with responsibility over such things provided the following observation:

We continue to oppose the entry to the UK of individuals where we believe their presence in the United Kingdom is not conducive to the public good or where they have been found guilty of serious criminal offenses abroad ….”

These people really need to get a clue. Seriously. Great Britain has far more serious problems than keeping the likes of Martha Stewart out.

Categories: Miscellaneous
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Rick Mariano Appeal Denied

June 21, 2008 · 2 Comments

A federal appeals panel yesterday upheld the 2006 conviction and sentence of ex-City Councilman Rick Mariano on corruption charges.

Mariano, 52, is serving a 78-month sentence at the federal prison in Fort Dix and is scheduled to be released in March 2012.

The disgraced pol argued that there was insufficient evidence to support his convictions for honest-services fraud and that the sentencing judge erred in calculating his guideline-range sentence.

Writing for the three-judge panel, U.S. Court of Appeals Judge D. Michael Fisher said evidence showed that Philip Chartock, who owned and operated a scrap-metal business in Mariano’s district, made three payments of $23,000 to Mariano.

The payments “occurred in close proximity” in 2002 while Mariano was taking official action on behalf of Chartock’s business.

Fisher said a rational jury could have found Mariano took the money in exchange for official favors.

Fisher also said evidence showed Mariano did not publicly disclose the payments as required by law, and a rational jury could have concluded that he concealed them while doing official favors for Chartock. *

Source: Philly.com

Categories: Philadelphia · Political cases
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Snipes’ Prosecutors Are Sore Losers

June 21, 2008 · Leave a Comment

According to Ocala.com, federal prosecutors have decided to appeal a federal district judge’s decision to allow actor Wesley Snipes to remain free on bail while he appeals his sentence on three misdemeanor counts of failing to file a federal income tax return. Snipes was sentenced to 12 months incarceration for each count, with the sentences to run consecutively, meaning Snipes would likely serve close to the full 3 years (there is no parole in the federal system). The prosecutors are clearly not content with the draconian sentence – consecutive terms, under the circumstances, is somewhat unusual, and very likely unconstitutional – that, in my view, reflects the sentencing judge’s having taken into account alleged conduct for which Snipes was not actually convicted, the prosecution will now ask an appellate court to overrule that same sentencing judge’s decision to allow Snipes to remain free while the appellate process plays out. Snipes does not represent a danger to the community, and the risk that he will flee the United States appears to be minimal at most. These prosecutors are, at best, sore losers. I suppose they ran out of important things to do, like hounding escort service owners into suicide, or pursuing professional athletes for lying about steroid use. Nitwits.

Categories: Prosecutors · Sentencing · Tax Cases

Lord Black’s Chances On Appeal Appear Dim

June 6, 2008 · Leave a Comment

The Chicago Tribune reports that Lord Conrad Black’s attorneys received what the paper described as a “skeptical” reception from a panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. Lord Black is appealing his conviction for fraud and obstruction of justice.

Categories: Appeals · Financial Crimes · White Collar Crime

Bonds Pleads Not Guilty To New Indictment

June 6, 2008 · 1 Comment

Home run king Barry Bonds entered a plea of not guilty to a re-written federal indictment; the San Francisco Chronicle has the details. I guess after the cracker jack job the feds did on the D.C. Madam case, its time to turn to the next highest national law enforcement priority. No doubt Roger Clemens is next in the queue.

Categories: BALCO · Barry Bonds · Sports cases · perjury
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Fumo Confidante Agrees To Plead Guilty And Cooperate With Prosecutors

June 5, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Not a good news day for Vince Fumo. As discussed in the below article from The Philadelphia Inquirer, longtime Fumo aid Howard Cain has agreed to plead guilty to tax related charges and to cooperate with the feds:

State Sen. Vincent J. Fumo’s legal predicament worsened today when federal prosecutors disclosed that a longtime Fumo confidant, jammed up with his own criminal tax problem, had agreed to cooperate with the government.

Howard J. Cain, 60, is expected to take the stand this fall as a key prosecution witness when Fumo stands trial in a sweeping federal corruption case.

Cain has agreed to plead guilty to a single count of tax evasion. In return for his cooperation, prosecutors have pledged to ask a judge for a reduction in Cain’s sentence for failing to pay any income taxes for 16 years.

A top Philadelphia political strategist for decades, Cain is the only person from Fumo’s famously loyal inner circle to defect and become a prosecution witness.

In court documents filed today, federal prosecutors said that while investigating Fumo, agents discovered that Cain hadn’t filed federal tax returns back to 1991.

They said they couldn’t reliably reconstruct earlier years, but that he owes $411,000 in back taxes on $1.6 million he made from 1997 through 2006.

Cain signed a plea agreement stating that he had “engaged in a conspiracy with Vincent J. Fumo” under which the State Senate paid Cain more than $500,000 since 2000 ostensibly to work on issues and deal with civic groups and officials, when he was actually engaged in political campaigns.

The allegation that Fumo defrauded the State Senate by illegally using taxpayer money for political work is one of the key charges against him.

Fumo is also charged with illegally extracting personal benefits, including luxury yacht cruises, maid service, and power tools and vacuums, from the State Senate and a pair of nonprofit organizations and with attempting to thwart the federal probe with a cover-up.

Cain is a large, amiable man respected for his political acumen and technical skill at polling, voter drives and campaign ads. Now alienated from Fumo, he had been one of the senator’s closest friends and allies for years. Fumo once said: “Howard is family.”

The State Senate was also Cain’s biggest client, paying him as much as $88,000 yearly under contracts that date back to 1985, prosecutors said their court filings.

In addition, a nonprofit group whose funding was obtained by Fumo bankrolled a recycling organization that paid Cain $60,000 annually in recent years.

Cain’s lawyer, Peter J. Scuderi, declined to comment today. So did Assistant U.S. Attorneys John J. Pease and Robert A. Zauzmer, beyond saying, in a statement, “We continue to prepare for trial in September on the larger conspiracy referenced in the plea agreement.”

Fumo’s lawyer, Daniel J. Cogan, also declined to comment.

Daniel Richman, a former federal prosecutor who teaches at Columbia University Law School, said that turning a close associate like Cain could provide the government with a “major advantage” at Fumo’s trial.

Along with their intimate factual knowledge, Richman said, such cooperators can provide a kind of personal narrative that makes dry documentary evidence come to life, connecting the dots for a jury.

On the other hand, Richman said, Fumo’s defense lawyers could argue that Cain’s admitted status as tax cheat means that he shouldn’t be trusted on the stand.

Moreover, he said, the defense was sure to focus on the incentives for Cain in his deal with prosecutors.

Under the deal, Cain is to plead guilty, probably within the next few weeks, to a single count of tax evasion. He could get up to 3 years in prison under sentencing guidelines. Prosecutors have pledged to seek a reduction in that in return for his cooperation.

He was not charged with the alleged fraud on the State Senate, but U.S. District Judge Michael M. Baylson may take that into account when imposing a sentence.

Cain agreed to pay back the $411,000 in taxes, plus at least $325,000 in interest. He could be fined up to $250,000.

According to the court documents, Cain got away with not paying federal taxes for so long by a fairly simple maneuver.

As an independent contractor, he had the State Senate and all his other clients pay his business, Venture Analysis, which he operated out of his home in Wayne. Venture Analysis – Cain was its sole employee – never filed federal 1099 tax forms or W-2s, thus leaving the IRS in the dark about Cain’s income stream.

Indicted in early 2007, Fumo was originally scheduled to stand trial in February. He won a delay until September after he switched lawyers.

In the meantime, prosecutors, the IRS and the FBI have continued to gather evidence. The FBI and IRS raided Cain’s home office in February, seizing thousands of pages of records documenting Cain’s untaxed earnings and his spending.

Fumo is scheduled to stand trial starting Sept. 8. His codefendants in what could be a four-month trial are longtime former Fumo aide Ruth Arnao and two other former aides, Leonard P. Luchko and Mark Eister.

Source: Philadelphia Inquirer

Categories: Fumo Case · Philadelphia · Political cases · Tax Cases
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