Fahie Trial: Judge wants Prosecution & Defense back in court on March 7, 2024
The Miami Herald reported today, February 20, 2024, that U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams said Tuesday, that she wants both sides—federal prosecutors and defense attorneys who are at loggerheads—to return to her courtroom on March 7, 2024, with a potential legal solution to the seemingly intractable problem.
“From the start, this has been an unusual case in many respects,” Williams said at the end of a court hearing. But within minutes of being officially let go, two of the jurors—a man and a woman—contacted the judge to say they had apparent misgivings about their verdicts, setting the stage for an unusually rare post-trial dispute.
Federal prosecutors said the judge should stick to the original verdicts, arguing there’s no legal basis to bring the two jurors back into court to question them about their verdicts. The prosecutors pointed out there’s no evidence of a verdict mistake, internal or external pressure on the jury, or racist attitudes toward the defendant.
“Defense attorneys countered that, despite constitutional limits on questioning a jury about deliberations, there’s no reason why the two jurors with doubts about their verdicts cannot be polled again by the judge. They stressed that the cocaine trafficking conviction carries a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years up to life in prison,” the Herald reported.
Judge Williams, expressing frustration over finding a legal basis to resolve the verdict problem, called their discussions “meaningful.” But she pressed both sides to continue examining past cases in South Florida and around the country to help her reach a “just solution.”
“Hopefully, our discussions will be fruitful,” Fahie’s defense attorney, Theresa Van Vliet, told the judge. “There’s no lack of trying.” Williams, meanwhile, cautioned both sides about having any contact with the 12 jurors who served at Fahie’s trial.
Juror called one of the Defense Attorneys
Her concern arose because one of the jurors with apparent misgivings spoke by phone with one of the politician’s defense attorneys the day after the guilty verdicts, according to a court document, “He told me who he was and I said I remembered him,” attorney Joyce Delgado wrote in a Feb. 9 email, pointing out that she was returning the juror’s calls left at her law office.
“He then blurted out that he wanted to know what was happening with the case because he’s worried that if all the jurors are asked to return that they will ‘never come to an agreement’ so he wants to know what the process is,” Delgado wrote in the email, summarizing the exchange to her colleague, Van Vliet.
He Herauld added that Delgado said she didn’t know and told the juror that it was “inappropriate” for them to talk and hung up.
That conversation — along with two prior phone-call attempts and a voicemail message from the same juror — has become part of a growing body of evidence in the post-verdict controversy over the Miami federal jury’s decision to convict the ex-BVI premier.
Minutes after the verdicts were published and jurors discharged, two of the panelists contacted the judge’s staff. In short, both said “the verdicts as published had not, in fact, been their verdicts,” according to a court filing by Fahie’s lawyers, Delgado and Van Vliet.
The filing said Williams discussed the startling revelations with both sides, and then brought both jurors into the courtroom on the evening of Feb. 8, letting them know that she would be opening an inquiry and contacting them.
Next Steps
In their filing, Fahie’s defense lawyers said the judge has the latitude to ask the two jurors in question about their verdicts on the four charges against the ex-BVI premier, “The parties appear to agree that the court has discretion in deciding whether to conduct the requested inquiry,” the defense lawyers wrote in court papers. “The defense asks, at this point, only for effectively a repolling of the jury or at minimum the two jurors in question.”
But prosecutors Kevin Gerarde and Sean McLaughlin sharply disagreed with that approach, noting there’s no apparent legal reason to question any of the jurors again about their verdicts because “the defendant has not alleged any juror misconduct.”
“Instead, the defendant seeks to explore—through juror interviews—whether any such misconduct may have occurred,” they wrote in court papers filed Monday. “This type of speculative request remains expressly prohibited under [the law].”
23 Responses to “Fahie Trial: Judge wants Prosecution & Defense back in court on March 7, 2024”
We about to calaps take showande the yes man and send we andreww
" if it looks like a fish...smells like a fish and tastes like a fish...ita probably a fish" something deffinately fishy about all of this.
the juror under oath stated in polling that it was their decision.....thwn afterwards saya ita not their decision.....they should be lockwd up for purjury !
the judge must stand by the ruleing otherwaie this is going to set a president for years to come..all a juror has to say after a ruming is...." actually your honour..that wasnt my decision even though in court i just said it was"
Jail,we don't need that crap anymore