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1.1 MB

Extraction Summary

3
People
2
Organizations
1
Locations
2
Events
2
Relationships
2
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Legal document
File Size: 1.1 MB
Summary

This legal document argues against a defendant's proposed bail conditions, asserting that her financial proposal is vague and would leave her with ample resources (over $3.5 million plus future income) to flee prosecution. The filing contends that the proposed financial monitorship creates a conflict of interest and that the defendant's pending pretrial motions do not weaken the strength of the government's case. The author urges the Court to reject the defendant's proposal, concluding she remains a significant flight risk.

People (3)

Name Role Context
defendant defendant
The subject of the legal filing, whose financial proposal and pretrial motions are being discussed.
defense counsel attorney
Mentioned in relation to their assertions and holding the defendant's retainer fees in escrow.
monitor financial monitor
A proposed role to oversee the defendant's finances, which the document argues would have a conflict of interest.

Organizations (2)

Name Type Context
Court government agency
The judicial body being addressed in the motion, which has authority over the defendant's bail conditions.
Government government agency
The prosecuting party in the case against the defendant.

Timeline (2 events)

The defendant proposed a monitorship program and financial arrangement as part of her bail conditions.
The defendant filed numerous substantive pretrial motions to challenge the government's case.

Locations (1)

Location Context
Mentioned in a hypothetical scenario where the defendant might flee.

Relationships (2)

defendant professional monitor
The defendant would employ and pay the monitor, which the document argues creates a conflict of interest between the monitor's duty to review finances and their employment relationship.
defendant professional defense counsel
The defendant has paid her counsel approximately $7.6 million in retainer fees, which are held in escrow.

Key Quotes (2)

"has not been fully candid about her financial situation"
Source
— Court (Cited as the Court's prior determination regarding the defendant's financial disclosures.)
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Quote #1
"numerous substantive pretrial motions now before the Court amply challenge the purported strength of the government’s case."
Source
— defendant (An argument made by the defendant in her motion, which this document refutes.)
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Quote #2

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,630 characters)

Case 1:21-cr-00330-AJN Document 165-1 Filed 03/09/21 Page 8 of 9
Page 8
least $2 million. In addition, the defendant proposes that she retain an additional half a million dollars in liquid assets in an unrestrained account, as well as any future income.² That figure appears to be in addition to the approximately $1 million in “chattels” the defendant has disclosed among her various assets. See Dkt. 97, Ex. O at 9. In short, the defendant’s proposal would leave her with ample resources to fund her flight from prosecution.
Further still, the defendant’s Motion provides only cursory details of the monitorship program she proposes, and it offers no legal precedent to explain what, if any, authority this Court has to establish and oversee such a monitorship. Aside from defense counsel’s assertions, the Motion offers nothing that would enable the Court to meaningfully consider the details of such a monitorship. Among other things, it is unclear from the defendant’s Motion whether such a program would require the defendant’s voluntary compliance with the monitorship, or whether the funds would be placed in a bank account that the defendant could not access. Given that the defendant’s Motion suggests that attorney’s fees could be disbursed without approval, it appears that the defendant’s proposal would provide her latitude to engage in financial transactions, subject only to a review that would require her voluntary compliance.
Finally, although the defendant does not provide any detail about the amount of money she would pay the monitor, presumably the monitor would not undertake this responsibility for free. As a result, the tension between the monitor’s obligation to review the defendant’s finances and the monitor’s employment relationship with the defendant creates a conflict of interest. But at bottom, if the Court determines that the only way to keep the defendant from using her assets to flee is to take away control of her assets, then she is too great a flight risk to release.
In sum, in light of this Court’s determination that the defendant “has not been fully candid about her financial situation,” the Court should reject the defendant’s vague proposal. (Dec. Op. at 2). Nothing in the defendant’s Motion should alter the Court’s determination that the defendant poses a significant risk of flight, and that she has the resources and skills to flee prosecution. The Court should reject the proposed bail conditions.
3. The Defendant’s Pending Pretrial Motions Have Not Diminished the Strength of the Government’s Case
Finally, the defendant also argues that the “numerous substantive pretrial motions now before the Court amply challenge the purported strength of the government’s case.” (Mot. at 7). But the defendant cannot merely point to the sheer volume of briefing she has filed to suggest that the strength of the Government’s case has diminished. To the contrary, as the Government has set forth in detail in its memorandum in opposition, the defendant’s pretrial motions are entirely without merit. In any event, it is premature for the defendant to claim that her pretrial motions— which have not been adjudicated, much less granted—have altered the Court’s original
² The defendant’s proposal also leaves unrestrained several million dollars in escrow for the defendant’s legal fees. See Dkt. 97, Ex. O at 9 (listing approximately $7.6 million in retainer fees); see also Mot. at 6. If the defendant fled the country, her counsel would presumably be required to return those funds to the defendant, who would no longer need defense counsel in this case.
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