Rosemond v. United States

378 F. Supp. 3d 169
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 5, 2019
Docket11-cr-424(ENV)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 378 F. Supp. 3d 169 (Rosemond v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosemond v. United States, 378 F. Supp. 3d 169 (E.D.N.Y. 2019).

Opinion

Rosemond's prayer would go unanswered. A cooperation agreement was never tendered. Mem. at 10. Worse yet, the government extended cooperation agreements to five "star witnesses" who would testify against him at trial: Henry Butler, Winston Harris, Khalil Abdullah, Bryan James and Tony Martin. Mem. at 15. There was little mystery about what the next act of the pre-trial play would be.

Advised that Rosemond's lead counsel had been present at each proffer session, the trial court held a Curcio hearing to ensure that Attorney Shargel's representation of Rosemond would not create a conflict of interest or an ethical impediment presenting an obstacle to his continued *174representation and, most important, that Rosemond was aware of his right to counsel who was conflict- and impediment-free. Namely, Attorney Shargel was a witness to Rosemond's proffer sessions and might need to take the stand to rebut the government's evidence of what petitioner had proffered. See generally Opp. Ex. E. At the hearing, Attorney Shargel represented that his recollection of the proffer sessions did not differ from that of his co-counsel, and his co-counsel could, therefore, testify, if necessary. Opp. Ex. E at 15.

At trial, Shargel's opening statement was premised on the fact that Rosemond made misstatements, or outright lies, during the proffer sessions:

[Rosemond] was going to come to the table and make a deal with the government.... He was going to cooperate, and he sat with them .... And you're going to find from the evidence in this case that Jimmy Rosemond went in and he made false accusations and false confessions....
False confessions. He said he saw things that he didn't see. He said he did things that he didn't do. He says he was at places where he wasn't.

Tr. 56. Attorney Shargel then gave examples of Rosemond's "false confessions," such as his claim that he met with an attorney in Los Angeles who, it turns out, was in Colorado on the date in question. Tr. 57. Attorney Shargel went on to reference in his opening an article written by Chuck Phillips: "[Phillips] said in the article, in the Los Angeles Times, that Jimmy Rosemond was responsible for the 1994 shooting of Tupac Shakur. He was not. Jimmy Rosemond was not involved in that shooting.... You will learn more about that during the course of the trial." Tr. 45. Attorney Shargel's stratagem having failed, Rosemond now lambastes his trial counsel for an opening statement that told the jury that "his own client told the government lies - and only lies - during his proffer sessions." Mem. at 46.

There was also a more significant reaction. Immediately after Attorney Shargel's opening, the government latched on to the reference in it to petitioner's non-involvement in the 1983 murder to argue that "Mr. Shargel has opened the door on the proffer statements" and presumed, somewhat brashly, that "all of the [proffer] statements are coming in." Tr. 59. In reply, Attorney Shargel acknowledged that this was his intended outcome, stating, "Well, I certainly opened the door intentionally and deliberately," Tr. 60, doubling down on his theory that "everything" Rosemond said during the proffer sessions "was untruthful." Tr. 61.

During its closing statement, the government "repeatedly relied on the fact that Mr. Rosemond confessed to the charged crimes," Mem. at 20, statements that were allowed into evidence, he complains now, because his trial counsel had opened the door to them. The government's "tenth reason" why the jury should convict Rosemond was that "the defendant confessed to being the boss" and that "[o]n nine separate occasions, represented by two able Counsel, the defendant met with the Government and confessed to his involvement in every crime for which he has been charged in this case." Tr. 2486.

In reality, though, the evidence extended far beyond his own words during the proffer sessions that his lawyer had branded as total lies. In traditional fashion, for example, one of the cooperating witnesses, Henry Butler, a member of the narcotics trafficking organization, would testify against him. Butler would reveal his pedigree on direct examination, testifying that he had previously pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm; that he faced a minimum of ten years in prison;

*175and that the government had offered him a cooperation agreement, in which it would file a "5(k)1 motion with the courts" to "allow[ ] the judge to sentence [him] below the minimum guideline" if he fulfilled his part of the agreement. Tr. 789-91,802.

The defense sought to buttress its theory that the evidence, including confessions that Rosemond had told the government and which had been retold to the jury, was a collection of lies. It called as a witness Scott Srebnick, a Miami-area lawyer, who Rosemond had retained to represent him in a potential libel action against the Los Angeles Times. Tr. 2435. The Los Angeles Times had published an article, later discredited, connecting Rosemond with the murder of Tupac Shakur. Tr. 2436-37.

On June 5, 2012, Rosemond was convicted on all counts. Dkt. No. 127. Rosemond moved for a new trial, in part based on what he claimed to be "juror misconduct," see Opp. at 33, and submitted to the court an affidavit by an individual, Jarrod Whittaker, who had met Rosemond ten years earlier and "wanted to write an article about his trial." See Mem. Ex. J ("First Whittaker Affidavit") ¶ 1-2. The First Whittaker Affidavit relates that Whittaker searched on his computer "to locate and interview one of the jurors" from Rosemond's trial, Austin Olatunji. Id. ¶ 4. Olatunji purportedly told Whittaker that two of his female co-jurors "made it very clear that they opined that James Rosemond was guilty due to his involvement in the Tupac thing." Id. ¶ 5.

The reported juror improprieties were raised by the defense at the time of sentencing. With apparent concern that the recollection of jurors be protected from taint by a frenzy of post-trial contact, the trial court barred the parties from contacting any of the jurors without prior judicial approval. Referring specifically to the Whittaker episode, the trial court warned counsel: "It's true in any case, but this case has the specter of - I'm referring now to the activity that got Mr. Rosemond into my courtroom.... And I'll accept that this Whittaker did this on his own. No one contacts jurors in this case on behalf of the defense or the prosecution without running it through me first. Okay? Understood?" Mem. Ex. F at 27. The court also orally denied the motion for a new trial. Id. Rosemond was then sentenced to a term of life imprisonment. Dkt. No. 244.

Rosemond's direct appeal to the Second Circuit advanced six grounds for relief:

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Bluebook (online)
378 F. Supp. 3d 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosemond-v-united-states-nyed-2019.