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Questions for Loretta Lynch on secret dockets

When confirmation hearings begin today for Loretta Lynch to replace Eric Holder as U.S. Attorney General, conservatives will seek her views on President Obama’s executive order on immigration and liberals will seek her views on the prison at Guantanamo. We hope at least one member of the Senate Judiciary Committee will seek her views on the parallel, covert judicial system her office runs. 

As U.S. Attorney in the Eastern District of New York, Lynch perpetuated the concealment of criminal cases to protect fraudsters who promised cooperation against other criminals. For example, in the Felix Sater case, her office not only hid his victims’ legal rights to seek mandatory restitution, it continues to let him live the high life on his share of the $40 million stolen from the life-savings of his victims. Even more astonishing, this fraudster was allowed to bilk a new generation of victims by falsely presenting himself as a businessman with a clean record, all because his record was kept hidden.

{mosads}Here’s the background: In 1998, Felix Sater and two co-conspirators, Sal Lauria and Gennady Klotsman, pled guilty to defrauding investors, many elderly, some Holocaust survivors, in a classic pump-and-dump stock scheme. Though his plea and cooperation had been made public as early as 2000 – by Lynch herself, and her own staff – he was not sentenced until 2009. At that sentencing, he was represented by Leslie Caldwell, a former white-collar crime prosecutor for the Eastern District who, as his private attorney, argued for leniency based on his cooperation with the government. 

In court opposing her was Assistant U.S. Attorney Marshall Miller, also the Eastern District attorney charged with protecting victims’ rights. Somehow this “victims’ rights advocate” failed to advocate for restitution, or any other rights, and so, with those omissions, which continued a decade-long failure to tell Sater’s victims of the case, and Caldwell’s “excellent” representation, Sater’s only criminal punishment for stealing $40 million was a $25,000 fine. 

Lynch, who again headed up the Eastern District a few months after Sater received his sweetheart sentence, has since fought at every turn to keep this case secret from Sater’s victims, who by law could still enforce their rights. Were it not for an order of the United States Supreme Court directing much of the case be made public, the secrecy would undoubtedly remain and no one would know what had happened. 

You’d think connections to such a case would be an impediment to the careers of the Eastern District prosecutors involved. You’d be wrong. Caldwell is now assistant attorney general for the Criminal Division. And whom did she tap as her second-in-command? First Miller, then Andrew Weissmann, who as chief of the Criminal Division under Lynch was also involved in the Sater case. 

Now the president has tapped Lynch to preside over and extend this Eastern District trifecta. Senators should ask her:

Paul Clement, the former Solicitor General, wrote that when we prepared a civil RICO complaint in 2010 against Sater, “two district courts quickly swung into action to squelch any public reference to the earlier criminal proceedings and to punish” the filers. The Southern District of New York sealed the civil RICO complaint and the Eastern District issued a restraining order barring the dissemination of Sater’s pre-sentence report and other documents. The Second Circuit then ordered us not to report the governmental misconduct to Congress.

Much of the legal establishment seems worried that this case exposes a secret criminal docket of unknown scope. At the least, Congress should use the confirmation as an opportunity to lift that rock and follow up by asking the General Accountability Office to investigate the extent of these covert practices. 

Oberlander and Lerner are attorneys in New York and represent victims of Sater, Lauria and Klotsman.

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