a sign and trade deal woulde be better
assets are forfeited and el chapo pays for the wall and takes larry nasser with him
you can get drugs in the us more easily than you can get bcg to to treat autoimmune diseases
something is wrong
get the crap out of the courtroom and drugs for anyone and all who want them
not guilty simple as that a lost cause waste of time and resources and effort
free fentanyl for all will prove irresistible to some and others will soon vanish
asset forfeiture corrupts the government
ser writings of former federal magistrate peter nimkoff on the futlity of the ear on drugd
the judge in the chspo case must think jurrors do not watvh the internet tv or are too young to have been in the audience ehen evil kineivsl ju ped cars eg at the nassau coliseum years ago
you should not need an armed roberry or felony murder yo get bcg to get better,
see faustmanlab.org pubmed.org ristori bcg
cuomo eill soon doeak up and tell trump the boy eill vonstruct a tunnel under the hudson fast and cheap and osy for your eall eith a motorcycle drsg strip underneat it and eill get this shit out of the
federal court house for some useful civil cases
walk the boy, build the wall, dig some tunnels and make drugs free for all
In a rare but not surprising move, a federal judge in Brooklyn has ruled that when JoaquÃn Guzmán Loera, the Mexican drug lord known as El Chapo, goes on trial in September, the case will be heard by an anonymous and partly sequestered jury.
In an order issued Monday night, the judge, Brian M. Cogan, said that Mr. Guzmán’s “history of violence” warranted keeping secret the jurors’ names, work places and addresses throughout what is likely to be a three- or four-month trial. Judge Cogan also ruled that the jurors should be driven to and from their homes to Federal District Court in Brooklyn by armed federal marshals. He added that he will tell the jurors the restrictions were being put in place “to protect their privacy and to ensure that the trial proceeds expeditiously.”
The use of anonymous juries has long been controversial because it can erode the presumption of innocence and prejudice jurors against a defendant before they have a chance to consider any evidence. Although Mr. Guzmán, the reputed former leader of the Sinaloa drug cartel, has not been charged directly with any violent crimes, the government has claimed, in public documents and several secret filings, that he once maintained an army of assassins who carried out hundreds of murders, assaults and kidnappings on his behalf — some of them to silence potential witnesses, others to take revenge against those who had betrayed him.
In his order, Judge Cogan suggested that Mr. Guzmán’s “associates and allies” may not be exclusively in Mexico, noting that shortly after his extradition in January 2017, a group of prisoners in California posted a video on the internet pledging to serve as his “hit men” and to help him escape. Though Mr. Guzmán’s lawyer has called the video “nothing short of a bad joke,” the prisoners in it can be heard to say: “If El Señor asks us to free him, we are going to take him out immediately.”
The first anonymous jury in the United States was empaneled in New York in 1977 at the trial of the Harlem drug kingpin Leroy “Nicky” Barnes. In imposing the secrecy restrictions, the judge in the case, Henry F. Werker, cited “the sordid history” of jury tampering in drug prosecutions in the city and said that “all safety measures possible should be taken for the protection of prospective jurors.”
Anonymous juries have also heard the trials of John J. Gotti, the former Gambino family don, and, more recently, those of a police officer charged in Baltimore in the death of Freddie Grayand George Zimmerman, who was accused in Florida of killing Trayvon Martin.
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Judge Cogan’s ruling is the latest in a string of legal losses for Mr. Guzmán who, aside from criminal charges, is also facing a $14 billion forfeiture claim. In the last several months, he has tried unsuccessfully to challenge his extradition and to lighten his severe conditions of confinement at Manhattan’s federal jail.
In an email on Tuesday, Mr. Guzman’s lawyer, A. Eduardo Balarezo, quoted one of his court documents saying that an anonymous jury would prejudice the panel against him and create an “unfair impression that he is a dangerous person.”
“All he wants,” Mr. Balarezo added, “is a fair trial.”
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