Home Front: WoT |
Dying defense lawyer Lynne Stewart ordered released |
2014-01-01 |
(CNN) -- A federal judge ordered the "compassionate release" Tuesday of a former defense lawyer imprisoned for aiding a convicted terrorist's communication from prison to his terrorist group. U.S. District Judge John Koeltl granted a motion filed by federal prosecutors and the Federal Bureau of Prisons to reduce the sentence of outspoken lawyer Lynne Stewart, who was sentenced to 10 years in prison in 2010. Stewart's "terminal medical condition and very limited life expectancy constitute extraordinary and compelling reasons that warrant the requested reduction," Koeltl wrote in his order. "...It is further ordered that the defendant shall be released from the custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons as soon as her medical condition permits, the release plan is implemented and travel arrangements can be made." Stewart, who is 74 years old and has breast cancer, was known for representing poor and sometimes unpopular clients as a defense attorney. In 1995, she represented the blind cleric Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman, who was convicted of a long list of terrorist activities, including his part in a plot to blow up American military installations. |
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-Short Attention Span Theater- |
Federal judge sends Huffington posters packing |
2012-03-31 |
![]() Rantburg.com A federal judge in New York state Friday dismissed claims that bloggers who had provided content without compensation should be compensated, according to US wire and blog reports. Judge U.S. District Judge John Koeltl said in the dismissal order that the plaintiffs entered their agreements with Ariana Huffington, founder of The Huffington Post, "with eyes wide open" and that they are not entitled to any part of the $105 million in damages alleged in the lawsuit. The lawsuit was brought just after Huffington sold her highly successful news aggregation website to AOL last year for a reported $315 million. Allegations in the lawsuit were that Huffington had unjustly enriched herself at the expense of several bloggers who had provided content over the years, a claim Judge Koetl dismissed. In the dismissal order Judge Koeltl said that in order for a unjust enrichment compensation to be determined under law, an expectation of compensation was to be explicit in the arrangements between Huffington and her bloggers. Instead, the only thing of value Huffington offered was exposure. The plaintiffs, in the person of Jonathan Tasini, Tara Dublin, Richard Laermer and Billy Altman, among many others also alleged that they were recruited by Huffington to provide content in exchange for exposure, and use social media such as Twitter to promote their articles and increase visits to the Huffington post. The claim the plaintiffs should receive some part of the $315 million purchase price Huffington reportedly received in the sale of the website was dismissed. It is known that many other bloggers were formerly with print media, who had been placed on the outs by consolidation and by job losses in the print media business, mainly newspaper and other print media, and had been hoping they would return to their former positions through their work with The Huffington Post. Judge Koeltl also said many of those writers and bloggers were not kept in their positions at The Huffington Post, that the writers who provided content could have taken other offers during the time in question. The Huffington Post was set up in May 2005 using money provided by several investors. Before she sold her website, Huffington continually returned to her investors for more money to keep her website running. At one point a year before she sold out to AOL, the Huffington Post was losing a reported $1 million a month. The Huffington Post also used paid writers and editors during it six year run before being sold. Chris Covert writes news for Rantburg.com |
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Home Front: WoT |
Stewart sentenced to 10 years |
2010-07-16 |
![]() Flanked Thursday by family and supporters, Stewart, 70, quietly wiped away tears as U.S. District Judge John Koeltl handed down his decision to give her 10 years and a month for helping a blind extremist cleric relay messages to terror cohorts in Egypt. The stiff sentence was four times what she originally faced. Koeltl said Stewart had "abused her position as a lawyer" and that her original sentence was "not adequate." The controversial civil rights attorney was convicted in 2005 of helping Omar Abdel Rahman pass messages from prison. She had represented him after the feds charged him with plotting to blow up city landmarks. Stewart was initially sentenced to 28 months. In an unusual move last year, the federal appeals court ordered that she be re-sentenced because the judge in her initial trial did not rule whether she perjured herself. The judge in her first trial was Koeltl. Who got his ass reamed by by the appeals court. Looks like it got his attention. Stewart was shocked by the new sentence. "I'm somewhat stunned by the swift change in my outlook," Stewart told the judge. "We will continue to struggle on, and we will take, of course, all available options to do what we need to do to change this." Former US Attorney General Ramsey Clark, her co-counsel in the terrorism case, called the sentence "a travesty, a total injustice." Haven't you died yet? Federal prosecutors had requested Koeltl hand down a 15 to 30 year sentence for the perjury and for abusing her position as a lawyer. "Lynne Stewart broke the oath she swore as an attorney and now stands sentenced in the system of laws that she betrayed," U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said. Stewart and her defense lawyers had asked Koeltl to uphold the original 28-month sentence, arguing that she suffers from life-threatening medical problems and that she never perjured herself. At the time of her 2006 sentencing, she brazenly told the judge she could do the 28 months "standing on my head." Ooooops...wrong answer. Yesterday, Stewart, who has battled breast cancer and other illnesses, was more circumspect. "I have since learned, judge, that nobody, particularly this 70-year-old woman can do 28 months standing on their head," she told Koeltl, adding that 15 years would be "a death sentence." Well well...it appears schadenfreude is back in town. And having a belly laugh ... |
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Home Front: WoT |
Government seeks tough sentence against Lynn Stewart |
2010-07-15 |
![]() U.S. District Judge John Koeltl was to resentence attorney Lynne Stewart on Thursday after considering the comments of appeals court judges who said he should review the role of terrorism in her case and consider if she lied when she testified at her trial. Stewart, facing up to 30 years in prison, was sentenced to two years and four months after her conviction on charges that she let blind Egyptian Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman communicate with a man who relayed messages to senior members of an Egyptian-based terrorist organization. |
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Fifth Column |
Lynne Stewart ordered to jail immediately |
2009-11-17 |
![]() Stewart, 70, has been free on bail pending appeal since her 2005 conviction for using her status as Abdel-Rahman's lawyer to violate federal rules barring him from communicating from his high-security imprisonment, and her 2006 sentence to 28 months in jail by U.S. District Judge John Koeltl. A three-judge panel of the Second U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in Tuesday morning's ruling, not only affirmed Stewart's conviction and ordered her to prison immediately, but remanded the case to Koeltl to consider whether she should get a harsher sentence. Prosecutors had sought 30 years, and the court said Koeltl - who cited her lifetime of efforts on behalf of the downtrodden in mitigation - may not have adequately considered claims that she perjured herself and other factors. "Because the district court declined to find whether Stewart committed perjury at trial, we cannot conclude that the mitigating factors found to support her sentence can reasonably bear the weight assigned to them," Judge Robert Sack wrote. "This is so particularly in light of the seriousness of her criminal conduct, her responsibilities as a member of the bar, and her role as counsel for Abdel-Rahman." |
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Home Front: WoT |
The Clinton Legacy: Coddling Terrorist Enablers |
2006-10-21 |
I corrected this limp piece of crap: The Clinton Legacy: Coddling Lynne Stewart The sentencing of hyper-liberal lawyer Lynne Stewart to 28 months in prison -- federal guidelines suggest 30 years -- defines the Clinton legacy better than the former president's finger-wagging histrionics to re-write history. Ms. Stewart, who's represented radicals and mobsters, was convicted in 2005 of helping imprisoned terrorist Sheik Omar-Abdel Rahman communicate with his followers in the Middle East. The blind Muslim cleric plotted to assassinate Egypt's president and to blow up five New York landmarks. U.S. District Judge John Koeltl rightly concluded her actions constituted "extraordinarily severe criminal conduct" and material support for terrorism that could have caused "lethal consequences." But after noting her treason did not trigger violence, Judge Koeltl commended Stewart. Being an advocate for life's bottom feeders is a public service, he said. The judge also cited Stewart's breast cancer and diabetes, conditions that would make it difficult for her in prison. Well, yes it would. But so what? Stewart is free on bond pending appeal. President Bill Clinton nominated Koeltl for the district court. And Jo Ann Harris, an assistant attorney general during his presidency, was one of those begging the judge for leniency. Why anyone questions the Clinton administration's resolve to fight terrorism continues to mystify the serial finger-wagger. |
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Fifth Column |
Fatapallooza! Lynne Stewart to Go on Tour |
2005-04-25 |
From last week's NY Post; no link 'cause it's now in the pay-for-it archive![]() A jury convicted Stewart Feb. 10 of fraud, providing material support to terrorism, and filing false statements while she represented blind Egyptian terror cleric Omar Abdel-Rahman, the mastermind of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. Her sentencing has been pushed back to September. Stewart faces up to 30 years in prison. Initially, Koeltl restricted felon Stewart's travel to only New York state - but, concluding she is not a flight risk, he has since OK'd her requests to go to Florida, California and Boston. In his order, Koeltl did not object to Stewart speaking at events, and said the government could require her to contact authorities during her trips to confirm her whereabouts. Stewart is scheduled to speak at nine engagements in the Bay area - including three rallies. The highlights include a Sunday gathering protesting the imprisonment of convicted cop killer Mumia Abu-Jamal. Stewart's defense committee publicized her California "tour" on her Web site. She declined further comment. Manhattan U.S. Attorney David Kelley's office, which prosecuted Stewart, also declined comment. But Stewart's critics blasted Koeltl's decision permitting a convicted terrorism-enabler to travel extensively before her sentencing. "During World War II, we didn't allow Hitler or supporters of Hitler to speak on our campuses," said state Conservative Party leader Mike Long. But the Peninsula Peace and Justice Center of California, which is sponsoring an event for Stewart, said "those who face terrorism-related charges will now be entitled only to a legal defense rooted in fear." |
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Home Front |
Sheikâs Lawyer Re-indicted |
2003-11-20 |
Just four months after a federal judge tossed out terrorism charges against activist lawyer Lynne Stewart and two co-defendants, the federal government yesterday re-indicted the trio on a different crime based on the same facts. The latest charges - which include a new conspiracy count - come eight weeks before Stewart and her co-defendants, Ahmed Abdel Sattar, a U.S. postal worker, and Mohammad Yousry, an Arabic interpreter, are to go on trial on Jan. 12. Stewart, 64, who defended Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman in 1995 when he was charged with plotting to blow up city landmarks, was indicted last year on charges that she served as a secret conduit between Rahman and his followers in the terrorist organization, the Islamic Group. In July, U.S. District Judge John Koeltl dismissed those charges saying prosecutors had applied a law that was unconstitutionally vague. In announcing the indictment, Attorney General John Ashcroft, said it was "justified by the evidence we obtained during our investigation." Stewart did not return calls for comment placed at her office nor did her lawyer, Michael Tigar. The latest indictment charges that Rahman, who is serving life in prison, urged his followers to conduct a holy war to secure his release. Under a new theory, the government asserts that Stewart and Yousry used the sheik as personnel to carry out their conspiracy. That last sentence doesnât seem to make any sense, I think it should read "were used by the sheik". The government now charges that Sattar conspired with Rahman to kill and kidnap individuals in foreign countries. Stewart and Yousry are also charged with the substantive offense of providing and concealing material support to the conspiracy to kill and kidnap. The superseding indictment also describes a series of new acts committed by Stewart and Yousry, including a May 2000 prison visit in which Yousry allegedly read communications to the sheik from Sattar and terrorists, while Stewart allegedly concealed that fact from prison guards. Iâll bet the vistors room was bugged, got them planning on tape. |
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