United States v. Orgad

132 F. Supp. 2d 107, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2551, 2001 WL 252913
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMarch 9, 2001
Docket00 CR 1168(JG)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 132 F. Supp. 2d 107 (United States v. Orgad) 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
United States v. Orgad, 132 F. Supp. 2d 107, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2551, 2001 WL 252913 (E.D.N.Y. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

GLEESON, District Judge.

The Government has moved to disqualify defendant’s principal counsel, Ronald Richards, from representing the defendant at trial. On February 16, 2001,1 issued an order stating that the motion was granted, and that this opinion would follow. Set forth below are the reasons Richards may not appear at trial as Orgad’s attorney.

BACKGROUND

A. The Los Angeles Indictment

In April 2000, a grand jury in the Central District of California returned an indictment (the “Los Angeles Indictment”) charging defendant Jacob Orgad with operating a continuing criminal enterprise, in *108 violation of 21 U.S.C. § 848(a), and with committing numerous other offenses relating to the importation and distribution of MDMA, commonly known as “ecstasy.” Orgad was arrested at his residence in New York and removed to California, where he retained Richards, an attorney admitted to practice in California.

Trial was scheduled to begin on October 1, 2000, at which time the government stated that it was not ready to proceed. As a result, the district court dismissed the Los Angeles Indictment without prejudice under the Speedy Trial Act. On November 1, 2000, the court converted the dismissal of the indictment into a dismissal with prejudice. Orgad has remained in custody, however, based on an extradition request from France.

B. The Instant Indictment

On November 16, 2000, a grand jury in this district returned an indictment charging Orgad with one count of conspiring to distribute and to possess with intent to distribute ecstasy. A superseding indictment, returned on December 8, 2000, added counts charging Orgad with the importation and distribution of ecstasy and a conspiracy to launder the proceeds of the ecstasy distribution.

Orgad arrived in this district in custody on December 14, 2000, and was arraigned the next day on the indictment and the superseding indictment. Richards filed a notice of appearance on that date and appeared on behalf of Orgad. On December 23, 2000, Richards filed an application for admission to appear pro hac vice, which I granted orally on February 9, 2001.

A motion schedule that was set on December 15, 2001, called for oral argument of all motions on March 2, 2001. Defendant filed numerous motions, and the government filed the instant motion to disqualify Richards. By order dated January 19, 2001,1 directed that two motions would be addressed before all others: defendant’s motion seeking my recusal from the case and the government’s motion to disqualify Richards. I accelerated the argument of those motions to February 9, 2001.

In a memorandum and order filed on February 16, 2001, I denied the recusal motion.

THE FACTS

The government’s motion to disqualify Richards is based upon his interactions, including several tape-recorded conversations, with Jennifer Leary, a government witness who allegedly was an ecstasy courier for Orgad. Leary will testify at trial about her role as a courier and her dealings with Richards, and the government will offer the taped conversations into evidence. The facts giving rise to the government’s motion are set forth below.

A. The Events Leading Up To The Taped Conversations

Special Agent Tony Chrysanthis of the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) and Special Agent Calvin Sigur of the United States Customs Sendee are based in California and were the case agents assigned to the investigation and prosecution of the Los Angeles Indictment. During their investigation, they identified numerous young women who, on Orgad’s behalf, had traveled from Europe to the United States as couriers, smuggling large quantities of ecstasy. One of these women was Leary; as the investigation progressed, several members of Or-gad’s organization told the agents that she had been one of Orgad’s couriers.

In mid-September of 2000, while preparing for the trial of the Los Angeles Indictment, Agent Sigur contacted Leary, who was working as an exotic dancer in Jacksonville, Florida. He wanted to enlist Leary to cooperate against Orgad. Sigur told Leary that the agents knew she had served as a drug courier and that they intended to serve her with a subpoena to testify at Orgad’s trial in California. Leary acknowledged that she had information to provide to the agents in connection *109 with their investigation of Orgad. Later in September, Sigur and Chrysanthis together informed Leary by telephone that they would like to come to Jacksonville to speak to her. She agreed to meet with the agents for an interview.

After that telephone conversation with the agents, however, Leary spoke with an associate of Orgad in Los Angeles, who urged her to call Richards. On September 29, 2000, Leary did so, and she reported to Richards that the government was interested in speaking to her. According to Leary, she told Richards that she had been a courier for Orgad. She asked Richards whether Orgad “was going to take care” of her. Oral Arg. at 22. 1 Richards (according to Leary) assured her that he would. He also told her that the government had no case against her, and advised her not to talk to the agents, not to answer her telephone, and to move to a place where the agents could not find her. According to Leary, she had additional conversations with Richards, similar in substance to the first, before her meeting with Chrysanthis in late October.

As stated above, on October 1, 2000, the Los Angeles Indictment was dismissed. The sequence of events relating to Leary suggests that the dismissal of the indictment made less urgent the agents’ need to speak to Leary. In any event, Chrysanth-is did not arrange to go to Jacksonville to interview her until late October.

On October 29, 2000, Chrysanthis was at the airport in Atlanta, on his way to Jacksonville, when he spoke by telephone to Leary to confirm ■ their appointment. From Chrysanthis’s perspective, all was well; Leary again expressed her desire to speak to him about Orgad. However, immediately after speaking with Chrysanthis, Leary called Richards and reported that a DEA agent was on his way to Jacksonville.

Subsequent events make it clear that, before October 29, 2000, Chrysanthis had already exerted pressure on Leary to provide information that would incriminate Orgad. Specifically, Leary was told, in essence, that if she did not meet with the agents and provide such information, she would be arrested and would face the prospect of a lengthy prison term. Leary reported this to Richards.

Richards correctly believed that solid evidence of such pressure would be useful in impeaching Leary if she ever testified against Orgad. See Oral Arg. at 35 (“I am thinking, this is fantastic defense evidence”). He also believed, incorrectly, that the agents’ approach to Leary— cooperate or face the prospect of a long prison term— was improper or perhaps even illegal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 F. Supp. 2d 107, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2551, 2001 WL 252913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-orgad-nyed-2001.