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a real estate investor, Connolly was victimized by the wrongdoing of the big banks,
whose criminal behavior went largely unpunished.
http://open.salon.com/blog/sickofstupid/2011/10/20/how_to_make_trillions_commit_frau
d_crash_the_economy Many real estate investors who sank their money into the
Connolly business lost money, big money, and blamed Connolly.
It is wildly foolish to believe that Connolly would defraud his investors and himself.
Instead, the Connolly business was a bit of driftwood caught in the tsunami of the debt
crisis. After losing their shirts, Connollys investors wanted someone to blame, and the
government gave them Connolly. The true fraudsters, the mega banks, were apparently
not on the governments radar. Importantly, Connolly lost more wealth than the other
investors. This negates the notion of a scheme to defraud. 1See United States v. Prows,
118 F.3d 686, 692 (10th Cir. 1997) (Intent to defraud may be inferred from
whether the defendant profited or converted money to his own use. (quoting
Kathleen Flavin & Kathleen Corrigan, Eleventh Survey of White Collar Crime: Mail
Fraud and Wire Fraud, 33 Am. Crim. L. Rev. 861, 86970 (1996))).
3. Securities Fraud is an Inappropriate Charge
The government chose securities fraud as the way to punish Connolly, but Connolly
did not believe he was dealing in securities, nor did he run his business in this way.
Therefore, his wrongdoing cannot be willful, and the U.S. Attorney should not have
prosecuted him. United States v. OHagan, 521 U.S. 642 (1997). In the superseding
indictment, the government alleges that petitioner bilked his investors out of money by
lying to them to obtain money. Petitioner denies this. The government knows it has
stretched the facts since Connollys business was not soliciting any funds in 2009.
Deliberate false statements by those privileged to represent the United States
harm the trial process and the integrity of our prosecutorial system. United States
v. Reyes, 660 F.3d 451 (9th Cir. 2009).
4. The Government Was Inappropriately Reaching and Cannot Prove
Connolly made knowingly false statements in an effort to defraud investors.
As an example, the government claims that Connolly told investors he would
purchase the Marshall Woods property but he failed to complete that purchase.
The reason for this was not deception at all as the government wrongly claims.
Rather, during the due diligence period, Connolly discovered the property was
suffering from vacancy problems and the price he was paying was too high, and he
was unable to get the seller to adjust the price. In 2009 when the real estate values
were changing rapidly, this can hardly be considered fraud, as it must be in order
1
Of
course,
the
scheme
to
defraud
is
a
necessary
element
of
the
money
laundering
charge
as
well,
since
it
would
have
produced
the
illicit
funds
that
required
laundering.
There
were
no
such
illicit
funds,
only
financial
losses,
so
the
money
laundering
charge
is
without
a
basis
and
also
improper.
for the government to prevail. This, instead, is just business. Deals fall through
when properties lose value. This does not imply that the purported buyer was
lying to his investors, it only means that the deal could not go through as planned
because the assumptions on which the deal was premised turned out not to be true.
5. Saluti Had an Impossible Conflict of Interest
A fundamental tenet of the American justice system is that cases must be decided on
facts. It is also said that the criminal justice system relies on plea bargaining to deal with
the volume of cases that it must handle. Here, the government simply did not care
whether the facts about Connollys charges had any truth to them at all. The
government was seeking a conviction. Gerald Saluti served it up for them in the form of
a plea agreement that he failed even to read, let alone negotiate. David Connolly paid the
price. All this would be acceptable if David Connolly knew what was going on and
approved it. However, he did not know. Saluti, charged with the solemn duty of
representing Connollys best interests, utterly failed in that regard.
Instead, Saluti suffered from a conflict of interest. He directly profited by David
Connollys confinement because he converted Connollys tax refund for his own use,
wrongfully keeping some $75,000. He ignored Connollys phone calls, avoided
meetings, and made promises he had no intention or ability to keep. 2 Saluti instructed
Connolly to sign a consent order with SEC but never gave him a copy and promised to
return in a couple of weeks with U.S. attorneys in tow who would offer a deal. Saluti and
his paralegal Iannacone constantly told Connolly that they would be making proffers of
information valuable to the government and that these proffers would prevent Connolly
from spending even a day in jail. Saluti even promised to make proffers to the
government on Connollys behalf after Connolly was sentenced. This cut into the sixty
day period petitioner had to make his appeal.
It is Salutis modus operandi to lie to clients to get them to sign away their rights, and in
this regard, Connolly was no different from Salutis other client victims. Indeed the
dockets of the federal courts bear witness to other defendants who have charged
ineffective assistance against Saluti. 3 See Washington v. United States, No. 13cv360
(E.D.N.Y. Dec. 30, 2014) available at
http://leagle.com/decision/In%20FDCO%2020141231B71/WASHINGTON%20v.%20U.
S; see also http://www.mtv.com/news/1642575/max-b-talks-from-jail-aboutappealing-75-year-sentence-ill-be-home/ (rap star represented by Saluti accuses him
of ineffective assistance of counsel). Most recently in January of this year, Saluti was
suspended by the NJ Supreme Court for one year for very serious infractions against
clients including neglecting their cases, and overcharging them without performing legal
services. The Supreme Courts review is utterly scathing. See Exhibit B, attached
hereto.
2
See
declaration
of
Donna
X.
Connolly,
attached
as
Ex.
A.
3
See
ecf
19,
filed
March
11
(incorrectly
filed
on
March
6)
incorporated
herein
by
reference.
Saluti told Connolly he would prepare a loss damages calculation offset, but that was
never done. He constantly lied to Connolly and his lies were designed to distract
Connolly from the fact that nothing was being done on his case, no investigation, no
modifications to the PSR, no nothing. Petitioner believed Salutis lies that he would not
serve a day in jail, and only have to be on probation. A defendant considering a plea has
a right to be adequately informed of the risks and advantages of accepting a plea.
United States v. Mohammed, 959 F. Supp. 1198m 1200 (N.D. Ill. 1998).
Of course, Saluti had no choice but to try to force petitioner to accept the plea since he
was completely unprepared for trial. Defense counsels failure to prepare equals
ineffective assistance. United States ex rel. Washington v. Maroney, 428 F. 2d 10 (3d
Cir. 1970). Saluti failed to do any work on the file, including reading the materials his
own client gave him. Superficial investigation by counsel means that counsels
performance was inadequate. White v. Roper, 416 F.3d 728, 732 (8th Cir. 2005). See
also United States v. Gray, 878 F.2d 702, 711 (3rd Cir. 1989) (the "failure to conduct any
pretrial investigation generally constitutes a clear instance of ineffectiveness," because,
"in the context of complete failure to investigate . . . [,] counsel can hardly be said to have
made a strategic choice against pursuing a certain line of investigation when s/he has not
yet obtained the facts on which such a decision could be made." (citation omitted)). This
pretrial investigation is mandatory, not optional, for an attorney to undertake: An
attorney must engage in a reasonable amount of pretrial investigation andat a
minimuminterview potential witnesses and make an independent investigation of
the facts and circumstances in the case. Bryant v Scott, 28 F.3d 1411 (5th Cir. 1994).
Saluti further advised petitioner not to say anything at the meeting with the probation
officer. Of course, petitioner discovered later that it was important for him to speak since
the purpose of that meeting was for him to tell his side of the story. Instead, it went
untold. Because Saluti failed to object to the PSR, it essentially became fact despite
that it is not, by any stretch of the imagination, at all accurate.
6. There is No Procedural Bar to Connollys Amended Habeas Petition
The government may claim that petitioner cannot bring these ineffective-assistance-ofcounsel claims because he brought no direct appeal. However, this is not the law.
Rather, there is an exception to the procedural default rule. Once a petitioner has brought
particular claims on a direct appeal, he may not re-litigate those claims in the context of a
habeas petition. See Mui v. United States, 614 F.3d 50(2d Cir. 2010): Ineffective
assistance of counsel claims brought for the first time on a habeas petition are not barred.
We hold that a defendant who raises on direct appeal ineffective assistance claims based
on the strategies, actions, or inactions of counsel that can be, and are, adjudicated on the
merits on the trial record, is precluded from raising new or repetitive claims based on the
same strategies, actions, or inactions in a Section 2255 proceeding. Since Connolly
brought no direct appeal, this limitation does not apply to him.