“There is no allegation that my client had anything to do with the content of these websites which were not operated by Axact,” said Patrick Smith, the lead counsel on the defense team, “but were operated rather, as my client understood it, by various customers of Axact, and Axact provided hosting services and other ancillary services. But Axact was not the content provider, at least as my client understood it. My client had nothing to do with the content.”
They offered a million dollar bond, secured against the house of his sister and brother-in-law, from where he had been arrested, as well as a cash deposit of $250,000 (the government said they will “be interested in knowing where that is coming from, at a minimum.”).
The government shot back, saying Hamid posed a flight risk because he had few ties to the community. “[Y]our Honor should be aware” the prosecutor continued, “ultimately the prosecutor in Pakistan that was working on the case had a grenade thrown into their home and then mysteriously the prosecution in Pakistan came to a halt.”
Bail was denied.
A pre-trial hearing date was set for April 6, by when the defense team was supposed to file all motions objecting to any materials submitted by government.
The trial date was set for May 15.
As it turned out, Hamid never made it that far.
Two days later, the government told Hamid’s lawyers of a forthcoming production of evidentiary material that would be “quite large” and requested a “hard drive that can fit up to 100GB” of data.
In response, Hamid’s lawyers filed three motions on his behalf on February 21.
In the first, he sought to suppress the evidence gleamed from his conversation with the arresting officer on the night of December 19, arguing that he had not been read his Miranda rights, that the agents questioned him before informing him that he was under arrest, and that he had invoked his right to have a lawyer present but was denied that right.
In the second motion he sought the return of all property taken from him.
But it was the third motion where the real battle lay.
His lawyers demanded what they called a “bill of particulars” from the prosecution, calling on the government to “[i]dentify all persons alleged to be co-conspirators (or persons known to the grand jury) in the conspiracy charge”, which was the first of the four counts he was indicted on.
Beyond this, they demanded that the government specify what acts he has committed, what specific misrepresentations or false statements he had made which were alleged in counts two and three, to identify the victims and so on.
A few days after these motions were filed, on February 24, the first curious development occurred in the proceedings. Patrick Smith, the lead defence counsel, wrote a letter informing the court that “[w]e have been advised that Mr Hamid’s family is arranging the payment of our bills. However there exists the possibility that third parties are paying the fees on Mr Hamid’s behalf.”
Hamid’s family in the US was his sister and brother-in-law and, although not exactly indigent, it was still difficult to see how they were able to afford the fees for such an expensive legal defence.
Hamid himself referred to this at a later date, when he told the court “I was made aware by my counsel about the source of the money and I know my family cannot afford so probably…” and then he abandoned the train of thought in mid-sentence, according to the transcript of the hearing.
After this disclosure, the battle of the particulars began.
“Despite alleging a conspiracy that spanned over a decade, the nine-page indictment contains boilerplate language that contains few details about the alleged scheme, who participated in it, how it was executed, and what mis-statements were made to consumers and when those misstatements were made,” his lawyers submitted.
“Absent these critical details of the alleged scheme and Mr Hamid’s role in it, Mr Hamid is left to speculate what criminal conduct he is accused of committing.”
The demand for a “bill of particulars” was the core part of Hamid’s defense in the pre trial stage.
On March 6 the government filed its response, saying simply that all evidence proving that the arrest followed proper procedure, and that the demand for a bill of particulars “is meritless” and all material to establish this would be presented in the evidentiary hearing scheduled for April 6.
Patrick Smith, the lead counsel defending Hamid, shot back on March 14.
“The government should know what statements and acts form the bases of its charges against Mr Hamid” he wrote, “and its refusal to provide the requested information and its attempt to excuse its conduct with voluminous discovery smacks of gamesmanship”.
It looked like a battle was brewing for the hearing on April 6, as Hamid’s lawyers mounted a fierce defense, arguing that the indictment was “breathtakingly vague”,
On March 20 both sides submitted a list of the witnesses they would call for the hearing scheduled for April 6.
This was the final submission.
The order of battle was set for the pre-trial clash.
And then something even more curious happened.
The court record goes silent for the next 14 days.
No further documents are filed, and subsequent documents make no reference to any conversations between the two sides from here on.
But on April 4, two days before his biggest day in court thus far, Hamid abruptly folded his hand and put his signature on a guilty plea.
Whatever it was, it happened in those 10 working days between March 20 and April 6.
“The defendant hereby acknowledges that he has accepted this Agreement and decided to plead guilty because he is in fact guilty,” reads the plea agreement of April 4.
Did Hamid have to cooperate with further investigation of the larger scheme that he confessed to being a part of?
The plea agreement, and his statement before the court on April 6 are silent about any further cooperation. But in two places, the language points towards the possibility.
The plea agreement refers to “any Proffer agreements that may have been entered into” between the prosecution and Hamid.
Legal dictionaries define Proffer agreements as “a written agreement between federal prosecutors and individuals under criminal investigation which permit these individuals to give the government information about crimes with some assurances that they will be protected against prosecution.”
Second, the plea agreement also alludes to a reduction in the sentence based on the defendants statement to be given in court “and subsequent conduct prior to the imposition of sentence”, language that could mean further cooperation or just good conduct while in detention, awaiting sentencing.
What about the co-conspirators?
All documents are scrupulously silent on this.
One official with the US Attorney’s office in New York, speaking on background, could only say that “my guess is that the government does not want the co-conspirators named at this point in time.”
The writer is a member of staff. He tweets @KhurramHusain
Published in Dawn, EOS, May 7th, 2017
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