Reviewing the history of Michael Avenatti’s requests to access his law firm's servers means revisiting the crucial role of the court-appointed receiver for the bankrupt firm. This thread tracks the evolving argument through court filings and my past reporting. ⚖️🧵⚖️
Avenatti 1st raised issue in July 2019, calling it "critical" to his defense.
"…government counsel wrote that if the defense wants access to the servers, '...you will need to raise those specific concerns with the Receiver.'" bit.ly/3Db02Nc
The receiver was Brian Weiss, a CPA who eventually was replaced by court-appointed trustee Richard Marshack. This happened after Weiss moved Eagan Avenatti into Ch 7 bankruptcy, which thwarted several lawsuits against the firm over misappropriated money. bit.ly/388h1By
One issue? The servers were Weiss’ responsibility, given his control of the law firm. Prior to the feds seizing them as part of the criminal probe, their location was a point of contention between Avenatti and Weiss, as Avenatti's July 2019 request (posted above) explains.
Weiss was represented by an uncle-nephew lawyer duo whose filings will make your neck hurt because they are *always* misaligned (and nearly impossible to copy/paste from 🙄) Like prosecutors, Jack and John Reitman have a penchant for footnotes. bit.ly/3mvUY03
On behalf of Weiss, the Reitmans opposed Avenatti accessing the servers. And they detailed a lot of reasons for doing so. "Moreover, there is a genuine fear that the data contained in the servers may be tampered with..." bit.ly/3mvUY03
Their filing touches on what we heard in court last week: Feds say Avenatti never said anything about looking specifically for Tabs software. “Avenatti has been unwilling to specify in any reasonable fashion what information he wants to access and why…”
Avenatti's August 2019 reply to Reitman focuses a lot on the need for Avenatti so he can continue representing clients as a lawyer. "Many of his current cases have important deadlines and trial dates that are fast-approaching."
"Currently, Mr. Avenatti cannot adequately represent his clients or transfer his clients’ documents to new counsel while the government and receiver hold these documents hostage." Here's the full filing on Google Drive: bit.ly/38a2PId
Judge Selna rejected Avenatti’s request: “Unfettered access is simply a different turn of phrase to conduct a fishing expedition.” Prosecutors were already producing materials, including “correspondence with victim clients, account materials, and EA LLP’s QuickBook records.”
Key in ruling: “The Government has acknowledged its obligation to produce all documents within the scope of the search warrants as well as its Brady and Giglio obligations.” Full order: bit.ly/3msfvCQ
But the issue kept coming up. In this May 2020 status report, Avenatti's lawyer Dean Steward talks of the extreme hardship he's enduring having to sort through the enormous amount of discovery in the case, and prosecutor's continuing disclosures. bit.ly/3kfZBZv
Prosecutors replied in a status report that includes a section labeled: "Defendant Has Received Detailed Records Relating to the Costs and Expenses Associated with the Victims’ Cases"
Full filing on Google Drive: bit.ly/2UG2s55
As filings indicate (along with my memory of these hearings), the focus wasn't on discovery but on Avenatti's purported lack of resources. Judge actually requested briefing on effects of "a party having but failing to apply resources in terms of a speedy trial and other rights."
But the focus turned more to the servers as seen through the next filings. Here, prosecutors liken Avenatti's search request to allowing him to search paralegal Judy Regnier's house or the law firm office "to see if the government missed anything." bit.ly/3kmk5Q6
Then Avenatti filed this: "Contrary to the government’s claims...the critical cost documentation for each of the alleged victim clients (and other clients for that matter) was not generally kept by the firm and organized by client-matter in Quickbooks." bit.ly/2UMNZEI
Judge Selna soon requested briefs specifically regarding "what legal obligation exists at this point for the government to allow access" to the database, and Avenatti outlined his concerns here. bit.ly/3D5Y5BT
USA's brief touches on what they're saying now: Avenatti never mentioned Tabs. "...although defendant claims that the EA LLP digital devices have categories of “critical” documents, he again fails to offer any specific information to support this claim." bit.ly/3mrmnQJ
Judge Selna again wasn't swayed by Avenatti's access argument. But again, this is long before the word 'Tabs' had been mentioned in court or in the filings.
Fast forward to the trial, and @Tabs3Software's prominent product placement. "WHAT IS TABS?" Avenatti has pushed it to forefront of his defense, and he's shown that his paralegal told investigators about it back in July 2019. My story here explains more: bit.ly/2W3ffQ1
As I shared last night, Judge Selna's weekend search order legally reopened a long-expired search warrant, and modified its scope. To have that happen during trial seems *very* extraordinary. (Anyone heard of it before?)
The briefs that come in tonight should tell us a lot about where the Tabs issue will stand when Judge Selna takes up Avenatti's mistrial motion over it tomorrow at 8 a.m.
Motion: bit.ly/3g5uRZX
Opposition: bit.ly/3j7zPY2
Reply to opp: bit.ly/3sP2ZhW
Here's Avenatti's Tabs report: "As of this filing, defendant’s review of the Tabs data has been extremely limited. However, even this preliminary review shows that the prejudice to the defendant in not receiving this data long before trial is significant." bit.ly/2WhuVPq
Regarding an earlier tweet, I realized it’s not so much Avenatti’s filing that lays out the pre-arrest fight over the server location, it’s the Reitman uncle-nephew lawyer duo’s. Full filing on Google Drive: bit.ly/3mvUY03
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Just in: Megan Thee Stallion has sued blogger Milagro Gramz, alleging she is purposely spreading false information online on behalf of Tory Lanez.
The federal lawsuit has four causes of action, including that Milagro promoted an "altered sexual depiction" of Megan.
Here's Megan Thee Stallion's full complaint, filed today in the Southern District of Florida by her lawyers at @quinnemanuel.
It describes Milagro as "a well-known online social media grifter who traffics in false and sensationalist narratives." documentcloud.org/documents/2525…
Here's the "Promotion of an Altered Sexual Depiction" claim.
"Defendant Cooper willfully and maliciously promoted the Deepfake Video without Ms. Pete’s consent. Defendant Cooper knew or reasonably should have know that the Deepfake Video was an altered sexual depiction."
Here’s the 14-page indictment against Sean “Diddy” Combs.
Three counts: racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking by force, fraud or coercion and transportation to engage in prostitution: drive.google.com/file/d/1iSrpU9…
You can tell by the "ALC" in the case number that Diddy's case has been assigned to U.S. District Judge Andrew L. Carter Jr., a 2011 Barack Obama appointee.
.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_L.…
Federal prosecutors are holding a press conference about Diddy’s case at 11:30 am ET (in 40 minutes!) and you can watch live on YouTube: youtube.com/@usao_sdny
New today in Hunter Biden's lawsuit against a former Trump White House aide who distributed the contents of his laptop: Judge Hernan Vera in Los Angeles has rejected Garrett Ziegler's motion to dismiss. storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.usco…
"Plaintiff did not sue Defendants for creating a report or website. Defendants are being sued for “accessing, tampering with, manipulating, altering, copying and damaging” Plaintiff’s computer data." storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.usco…
Judge Vera also has Matt Gaetz's and Marjorie Taylor Greene's lawsuit against Anaheim over the cancellation of their rallies in 2021. A jury trial is scheduled for June 2025.
Kenneth "Woody" Copeland went to jail on Friday after trying to plead the 5th in rapper Young Thug's trial.
Today, he's back on the stand in jail garb and says he's going to testify.
Watch live:
Woody says he doesn’t know how old his kids are because he’s spent so much time in jail.
Update: Now it’s Young Thug’s lawyer Brian Steel who may be held in contempt. This after he confronted Judge Glanville about an in-chambers ex-parte meeting with Copeland this morning over his 5th plea. Steel refuses to tell the judge how he learned of the meeting.
Just in: Judge Roland wants John Eastman disbarred for his 2020 election fraud claims and the Jan. 6 attempted insurrection.
Here's the full ruling. 128 pages.
"John Charles Eastman is ordered transferred to involuntary inactive status ... His inactive enrollment will be effective three calendar days after this order is served..."
I remember going to the first day of Eastman's bar hearing in LA back in June along with other reporters including the great @TomDreisbach. Little did we know what a marathon we were in for. 9 months later, a ruling.