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Category Archives/Archivos de la categoría: Articles
Colombians Subject to Extradition
Below is a copy of a letter I received from a concerned Colombian attorney regarding Colombian defendants and the problems that exist within the extradition process.
My response follows.
Dear Mr. Zapp,
Greetings on behalf of the families of victims requested in extradition by the United States. I am an attorney and […]
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Health Care or Prisons
This is an abridged version of an article by Nicholas D. Kristof that I read in The New York Times. My response follows the article.
At a time when we Americans may abandon health care reform because it supposedly is “too expensive,” how is it that we can afford to imprison people […]
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Those Jacksons Carry Cocaine
By HENRY FOUNTAIN
Published: August 17, 2009
You have probably heard the rumor that most American paper currency is contaminated with cocaine. It’s not a rumor, however — it’s true.
And it’s even truer now. A study by Yuegang Zuo of the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth and colleagues has found that about […]
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Rapid REPAT Letter
I wrote the following letter to the Department of Homeland Security in response to the notion that it was considering extending the REPAT program to federal inmates.
August 18, 2009
Dr. Char Wittenberg
Chief of Policy and Communications
Office of Detention and Removal Operations
U.S. Department of Homeland Security
500 12th Street SW
Washington, D.C. […]
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Roman Polanski
Roman Polanski is a famous, well respected, movie director responsible for films such as Chinatown, Rosemary’s Baby and, more recently, The Pianist, which won three Oscars. However, in 1977 he drugged a 13-year-old girl, had sex with her and was arrested for it. He agreed to a plea deal, […]
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Cooperation Agreements
A cooperation agreement is like a lease in New York City. You don’t read it. You just sign it and agree to pay the rent for a certain term. If things don’t work out it is because someone did not keep their side of the bargain. The landlord […]
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Question & Answer II
Question: What should be done after the defendant signs a plea agreement and prepares for sentencing?
Answer: A responsible family member should ask friends and relatives to write letters in support of the defendant. The letters should be addressed to the judge, but sent to the defendant’s attorney, who can review them, […]
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Save Money, Help Inmates, Reduce Prison Populations
An article by Robert Gangi, the executive director of the Correctional Association of New York, a nonprofit organization that monitors prison conditions, was published in The New York Times recently. Below are portions of the article I feel are relevant to the federal prison system. My editorial comments are […]
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That Is Just The Way We Do It
In dealing with government programs, I realized why there is such a fear of health care reform in this country. It is not because the government is evil, but because it is intransigent and inefficient.
Government Program 1 – Early Deportation in the New York State Penal System –
A foreign defendant […]
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Pressure Increasing For Reduction Of Sentences
This is an abridged version of an article I read in the New York Times, by Solomon Moore, titled Number of Life Terms Hits Record, about prisons and overpopulation.
The rising number of inmates serving life terms is straining corrections budgets at a time when financially strapped states are struggling to cut […]
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Court Declares Colombians Not “Extradited” and Merit No “Treaty” Protections
On July 7, 2009 the 11th Circuit handed down the case of U.S. v. Joaquin Mario Valencia –Trujillo, docket no. 07-10524, an opinion authored by the folksy, Edward Earle Carnes, who appears to be a “good old boy” from Alabama.
I have never seen a judicial opinion written with such perverse and […]
Cases Decided by Second Circuit Court of Appeals
Thanks to Federal Defenders of New York and their Blog: circuit2.blogspot.com.
Appellate waiver: In United States v. Suriel, No. 08-3952-cr (2d Cir. June 4, 2009), the court held that the wording of a Southern District plea agreement’s appellate waiver permitted the defendant to appeal an adverse “safety valve” […]
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Concealing Money for Transportation is Not Money Laundering United States v. Ness, No. 05-4401-CR (2d Cir. May 8, 2009)
Samuel Ness was convicted of money laundering offenses in connection with his armored car business, which had received and distributed millions of dollars in narcotics proceeds. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison. The Supreme Court vacated the decision and sent the case back to the lower court […]
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Sentencing Transcripts
In a recent case, the wisdom of ordering sentencing transcripts of co-defendants was reaffirmed. A defendant appeared for sentencing with the benefit of having read his co-defendant’s sentencing minutes. The court had noted that while the co-defendant had apologized to his own family, he never apologized to the victims or the families of those affected […]
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Consent to Search
A Court recently ruled that if only one occupant of a multi-tenant apartment is present and consents to a search of the premises, the search is considered legal. However, if all the occupants are on the premises and one objects to the search, then the search is illegal as to […]
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Clarification of Early Deportation
From the number of phone calls my office has gotten recently, it appears that many inmates in the federal system are under the impression that an early deportation program has been implemented. This is not the case. However, I believe that it is entirely reasonable to assume and hope […]
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Car Searches Revisited
I used to say that whenever a search occurred involving a car, it was legal. It was not even worth reviewing the facts. When judges heard the word “car” or “vehicle” they turned off their analytical minds and sustained the search. Why? Because for a generation, that was […]
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Question & Answer
Question: Does credit for time served apply when a person has been in custody awaiting extradition? And what types of Colombian evidence can be used in federal court? Can letters from alleged members of drug-trafficking organizations, addressed to the federal court, assuring that they did not know a particular […]
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Reviewing Criminal Justice
New York Times Editorial
Published: March 29, 2009
America’s criminal justice system needs repair. Prisons are overcrowded, sentencing policies are uneven and often unfair, ex-convicts are poorly integrated into society, and the growing problem of […]
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Response to Editorial: Reviewing Criminal Justice
If you had to be a prisoner in the United States, this is certainly the time. Because of the severe economic downturn in the United States, the government will not be able to keep prisoners incarcerated as long as they have. Sentences will need to be lower, “good time” credit […]
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