Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Peter Kott - Oral Arguments on Motion Seeking Release from Convictions


9:00 AM
3:07-CR-00056-01-JWS
Judge Sedwick
Anchorage Courtroom 2

USA
vs. PETER KOTT

(Peter Koski)
(Margaret Simonian)

(M. Kendall Day)
(Sheryl Gordon McCloud)

(Marc Elliot Levin)

(Kevin R. Gingras)

(James M. Trusty)

(Karen Loeffler)

(Kevin Feldis)

ORAL ARGUMENT

Pete Kott's attorney has requested that because the Prosecution withheld exculpatory evidence during the trial that Kott should be released from his convictions.  Today was the oral hearing on that motion, if I understand this right.  Below are my notes from 26 minutes in the courtroom. But I'll try to summarize what I think happened.  (I would note that this took place in Courtroom 2, not Courtroom 3 that has been the location of the Anderson, Kott, and Kohring trials and sentencing.)   [For my accounts of the trial itself you can link here: Kott trial, or go to the Kott trial label below right.]

As I understood this,  the defense is arguing that there was evidence in the 4700 or so documents that were released post trial that would have refuted the evidence that was used to convict Kott.  The judge asked the two sides to address two things:
1.  Address how the withheld evidence affects the outcome of the trial
2.  Talk about remedies should we find there be a finding that agrees with the defense motion.


 The defense mentioned three statements that specifically questioned Allen's credibility on the stand and Kott's guilt:

1.  In trial, it was revealed that VECO had paid for a poll that the Kott camp said they neither wanted nor needed.  But the value of the poll was a factor in the trial.  Sheryl Gordon McCloud quoted from the new evidence: 

Allen:  “You don’t owe me, [curse word], here’s the check.”

2.  In trial there was a lot of debate over the payment of $7000 above the bill submitted by Kott for doing flooring work at Bill Allen's home.  Prosecutors said it was an illegal payment.  In court McCloud brought out this new quote from the evidence not turned over to the defense until now, to show it wasn't:

"Allen said he gave him substantially more as a bonus, because they worked hard, worked their butt off, and it was “for the flooring work.”"


There were a few more like that.  The Prosecutors responded by saying the quotes were taken out of context and there was considerably more evidence including all the tapes.

The judge appeared concerned about the withheld evidence.  He now has to make a ruling.  After the hearing, McCloud was asked by the media when there would be a decision.  She shrugged and said it was a complicated case and it could be a while. 















Here are my notes from the hearing itself.  As always, a lot is missing cause I just couldn't keep up.  I did go back and use spell check, but otherwise they are pretty rough.  

9:02 Judge Sedwick  Kott’s motion seeking release from his convictions.  Want argument focused to make good use of time.  Jury returned general verdicts, based on specific acts.  $ with hardwood floor refurnishing, $1000 for campaign contribution, $5000 for down payment on truck, &  one more. [was it poll done for campaign?  not sure.]    Any one act could have been the overt act but we don’t know which act the jury relied on,  Same on count 2. 

Nature of relief if the motion granted.  We would discuss if charges should be dismissed with prejudice, or recharged?  and why.

Defense Attorney Sheryl Gordon McCloud for Kott: 
Elements of crimes, for extortion, court had to produce evidence Mr. K induced the payment and there was a quid pro quo.
Sencond  count - public official
Third count Conspriacy.

Tapes were lacking quid pro quo on campaign contribution, $7000 check for flooring, ????, and truck.  Talked about money, but not quid pro quo, exchange of items, or Defendant being one who induced those items.

Instead, Bill Allen, on the poll, said, “You don’t owe? me, curse word, here’s the check.”

Smith saying job was quid pro quo,  Allen saying $7000 to go to Pete jr. not  Pete Sr.

$5000 for the down payment of the truck.  Government argued this is ridiculous to believe this was just a loan.  “If you can’t believe him about interaction with Allen, what can you believe him about?”

What Allen said on the evidence was that he never ???

Chad Kadera [FBI agent]:  Roger? told BA that he couldn’t give him the truck, he was too proud. 

Undermined Kott’s total lack of credibility, here and elsewhere.

Flooring.  Paid $7K over the cost and the money to funnel money to Pete jr. for the campaign.  And Pete didn’t do work for the money.

New documents said, Allen said he gave him substantially more as a bonus, because they worked hard, worked their butt off, and it was “for the flooring work.”  

No solicitation for the $7K, no quid pro quo, it was to pay him for the flooring work. 

Truck and flooring were both relevant to the bribery, extortion convictions.

Nature of relief:  depends on nature of the problem.  I don’t think the nature of the problem completely clear yet.  We got 4000+ documents.  Govt. accuses us of taking things out of context.  Well we did our best, we only had the documents.  No evidentiary hearing.  Then we might find out that Allen perjured himself on the stand, because the documents conflict with what he said.

If the Govt. knowingly suborned perjury, then we have a higher standard - ref: Illiniois

Whether government knowingly suborned perjury. 
Relevant whether dismissal with prejudice.  Only if there was government misconduct.  The evidence doesn’t tell me the govt knowingly ….. they suggest, but I don’t know. We don’t know what Agent Kepner knew.

I think court should reverse convictions.
On the relief, we need an evidenciary hearing to know how culpable the govt. was.


Federal Prosecutor Trusty:  None of the charges are constitutionally ????  The $5000 “loan” was not affirmatively charged.

Judge Sedwick:  Allen should have been subject to different kind of cross examination.  There may be some testimony from Smith that defense has less ….   We might have Kott v. Smith.  Concerns of Smith do not rise to level of concerns about Allen.  Some significance

Trusty:  Obviously, your honor sat here and heard it first hand.  My understanding is that Mr. Kott opened - hadn’t received any cash except the $5000,

Judge Sedwick:   Yes.

Trusty:  really a sham of a loan.  Completely fair game to impugn Kott’s credibility on that..

Judge Sedwick   We now have information to question

Trusty:  Mr. Kott had the $ in his possession.

Judge Sedwick: Then Kott argued about the hardwood floor.

Trusty:  Trying to draw the disconnect ...where Allen was not necessary. 

Judge Sedwick:  but Allen was needed for $7K

Trusty;  Mr. Allen testified PK extorted him.  He didn’t say that.  He never alleged, in the true sense of the word, that there was some sort of blackmail.  A statement that should have been turned over, but doesn’t change things.  Three components that were turned over
302 [reference to rule or code by that number  a"302" is a report by an FBI agent summarizing an interview. (thanks CG)]  3 phrases that were turned over:
reference to it being a bonus
PK worked hard for it
Was part of his payment

that he worked hard - in Brady analysis - is not favorable to Kott.  This was a plan to inflate PK’s  payment for the floor.  The same 302 read in its entirety.  The tape shows them discussing a fool proof plan that overrides this characterization of this as a bonus.

About the truck:  during the sentencing you discussed whether it was a gratuity or bribe and how to consider it in the guidelines.  Your honor characterized it in an accurate way:  The parties called it a loan, a good way to save face, but it really wasn’t a loan.

It played out that way with the jury.  That loan, was something that didn’t make him a credible witness, a fair credibility knock at PK’s expense.  The big picture, fair to say, some materials, should have been turned over, but the Brady analysis, Constitutional analysis, whether things had to be turned over.  There really is no charge of bad faith, intimations, but nothing in the pleadings of the defendant.  Nothing that argues dismissal.  Dismissal where case was weak, facts weak, some bad motivation,.  Case where the government bent the rules to make a conviction happen.  Not what happened here.  The court had 56? tapes.  Case had overwhelming evidence.  This doesn’t call for dismissal or dismissal with prejudice. 

A good number of other areas pleaded here if your honor wants to ask, but mindful of the time. 

Judge Sedwick:  We need to clear courtroom quickly.

McCloud:  Counsel correct that PK had information in his possession - it was in his mind - but he had no proof.  What the government had was independent proof thru Allen and Smith.  Certainly Kott had the info, but he couldn’t prove it.

Also, the new info is not only relevant to credibility but also trial strategy.

Judge Sedwick: I understand, that’s in the briefings.

PK Defense:  When I say they suborned perjury, that’s the point of bad faith and needs to be examined in ….

Judge Sedwick   We’re going to adjourn  [9:28]



Flame and Citron - Left Me Speechless

Really, I have nothing to say.  I've linked to two reviews below, but talking about the movie just trivializes it.  The reviews don't tell you much more than the reviewers' knowledge of film history and the technical side of the movie.

It was like a strong wind blew through my mind, stirring up old ideas that had long ago settled like dust in my brain.  I have no idea how to grasp hold of any of those specs of dust, and really no desire to.  I'll just let them naturally find some place to rest and perhaps it will all make some sense later on.

If that makes no sense:  I was blown away by the movie.  But even to tell you what it's about (Danish underground in WWII) is like describing a shiny red Porsche as a vehicle to get from here to there.  At this point, for me the film is just something shiny that has whizzed by and I don't yet know enough to label it a Porsche or even red.  But maybe the words will come in the next week or so. 


For those who need specifics here's Robert Ebert's take.  And here's what Manhola Dargis at the NY Times had to say.



No, we didn't bike to the Bear Tooth.  It was 5˚F and falling and getting dark.  But there were two bikes there.  And they weren't covered with snow or ice.  And we did see two other people riding as we came.  It seems to me each year Anchorage has significantly more people riding as a regular mode of transportation, not just recreation, and not just in the summer.  I did bike Monday to Bede's anniversary.  But it was warmer - about 12˚F -  and sunny.

Why Isn't Obama Making His Decision on Afghanistan?

 The Asia Times Online reported on Nov. 6  a possible reason why Obama hasn't made his final decision on Afghanistan.  It the report is accurate, perhaps he was awaiting the results of various negotiations.  Then there was Fort Hood and now he's in China.  Just a possibility. 

ISLAMABAD - Abdullah Abdullah, who this week withdrew from the presidential election runoff in Afghanistan, thereby handing victory to the incumbent, Hamid Karzai, did so under pressure from the United States, Asia Times Online has learned.
In exchange for the pullout of the non-Pashtun Abdullah, Pakistan's military has agreed to actively mediate between Washington and the Taliban over a reconciliation plan that will allow the US to exit from Afghanistan, as it is doing in Iraq, with a semblance of success.
A senior Pakistani diplomat involved in backchannel negotiations on Pakistan, Afghanistan and US relations told Asia Times Online on the condition of anonymity that the deal over Abdullah, whom Islamabad considers to be pro-India, was made during the three-day visit to Pakistan last week of US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Apart from other senior officials, Clinton met with the chief of army staff, General Ashfaq Parvez Kiani, and the director general of Inter-Services Intelligence, Lieutenant General Ahmad Shuja Pasha. It was agreed that all US-led negotiations with Abdullah, which included offering him the position of chief executive officer of Afghanistan, would stop, and Karzai would get full backing for a second five-year term.
It was also acknowledged that Washington's political leadership, like the Pentagon, now accepts that the Taliban-led insurgency in Afghanistan is best tackled with contact between the Pakistan armed forces and the Taliban, and not by the political governments of the region.
Clinton's visit came at a crucial time as Pakistan is engaged in a battle against the Pakistani Taliban and other militants; if it fails, there will be a cascading effect in the whole region and a sure defeat of American interests in Afghanistan.(the rest can be read here.)

Monday, November 16, 2009

Watching for Meteors

I posted about the Perseids in August and that is getting people here looking for information on the Leonid meteor shower which is peaking at 13:00 Universal time.

This isn't an astronomy blog but since people are getting here because of the previous post, let me offer directions to a meteor blog:


meteorblog   This page tells you about current meteors.  A post November 10 on the Leonid Meteor shower says:

This year during their peak, which is November 17th, the Moon will be a waxing crescent with 1% of the Moon’s visible disk illuminated! This means that the sky will be very dark so the Leonids have a chance of being a very strong meteor shower showing. Over a decade ago the parent comet, 55P/Temple-Tuttle passed close to Earth and this comet is responsible for the Leonids meteor shower each year.
The Leonids are ultra famous because of amazing meteor storms in the past. The Leonids generally have been some of the most brilliant meteor showers over the years and take their name from the position of their radiant near the constellation Leo the Lion; this is because the meteors seem to materialize from that point in the sky. I would love to tell you that this year the Leonids will be a meteor storm, but meteor showers are one of the most unpredictable events.


meteor shower viewing in general - where and how and when to look.



For those interested in tonight's excitement 13:00 universal time converts (for North America) into:

UTC
(GMT)
PACIFIC
STANDARD
MOUNTAIN
STANDARD
CENTRAL
STANDARD
EASTERN
STANDARD
13
5 am
6 am
7 am
8 am

That's 4 am here in Anchorage.  And now at almost 9 pm the temperature is 0˚F (-18˚C), so it will probably be below 0 at 4 am.  BUT, the sky is clear which is the most important thing for watching meteor showers.

Enjoy.

AAIF 2009 - Shorts in Competition

"In Competition" means that the initial reviewers picked these films from the other shorts to compete for awards in the Festival.  I'm going to try to get all the films in competition in each category listed in separate posts.  There are about 17 other shorts (besides the animated shorts) in the Festival.  I'll add stuff to this page if I learn more.  And I'll put together a Festival overview post that will link to these other key posts.  (The descriptions come from the Anchorage International Film Festival (AIFF) site unless otherwise noted.  Picture sources are all listed with the film.)  Based on awards already won, there are some good films here. 


The Capgras Tide  UK  15 minutes
Director: Adam Hutchings
A man returns home from the hospital after suffering a concussion convinced his father is an impostor. In an attempt to prove his theory he uncovers a more shocking truth.  (AIFF description)

You can see a one minute clip at Adam Hutchings' website.

Note:  I became aware of Capgras reading Richard Powers' gripping book, Echo Maker. Capgras results from a head injury and causes one to believe that a close relative is really an imposter.  The book is also of interest to Alaskans because it takes place in Kearny, Nebraska where the Sandhill Cranes gather.  Powers weaves in the theme of memory that the cranes have to find their way back to Alaska and the memory of his capgras patient in the book.


 

Free Lunch  US 30 minutes
Director: Rick Curnutt
Walter Tanner Jr. is done with his privileged past, so he sets off on the road in a lunch truck with his friend Casey to serve the working people of Los Angeles who live their own real struggles.











Luksus (Luxury) Poland, 38 minutes
reżyseria     Jarosław Sztander

Here's Google's translation from the Polish website:
History seventeen boy - luxury, which after several years of living under the care of her pimp - Popers, became too old for customers - pedophiles. For this reason Popers abandons boy at the central station. Luxury can not find in the new situation and by all means try to go back to "business" and her pimp.

Or you may prefer how the Brooklyn Film Festival site (photo also from Brooklyn Film Festival site)  described it:
Synopsis
The lives of two boys converge at the central train station in Warsaw a day before Christmas. One is a teen prostitute nicknamed Luksus (Luxury) and the other is a beggar with a dog. The older one, because of his age, has just finished his 'career'. The younger one is only a step away from it as he has come into possession of a valuable notebook with the addresses and telephone numbers of clients. A local taxi driver, the main client and agent in the underage sex business, offers Luksus a job as a tout. Will the boy exploit his younger friend or will he help him escape pedophiles' clutches? Painfully realistic, photographed in the authentic setting of the station, Sztandera's film touches upon a real problem often ignored by Polish cinema.  [From the Brooklyn Film Festival site]



Miracle Fish  Australia 18 minutes
Director: Luke Doolan

" Eight-year-old Joe has a birthday he will never forget. After friends tease him, he sneaks off to the sick bay, wishing everyone in the world would go away. He wakes up to find his dream may have become a reality."
Photo from Short Film Central

Miracle Fish was shown at the Sundance Film festival this year.  According to a short audio interview with Doolan, Miracle Fish first got Italian money and only got Australian backing after it got into Sundance. 








Next Floor   Canada  12 minutes
Director: Denis Villeneuve


This film won the Canal+ award for best short film at this year's Cannes film festival.
During an opulent and luxurious banquet complete with hordes of servers and valets, 11 pampered guests participate in what appears to be a ritualistic gastronomic carnage. In this absurd and grotesque universe, an unexpected sequence of events undermines the endless symphony of abundance.  [Photo screen shot from trailer at metacafe.]


She's a Fox   US  18 minutes

Director: Cameron Sawyer
Infatuated with the hottest girl in school, fifth-grader Cameron Sawyer puts everything on the line–including his mullet—to win the girl of his dreams.
[Photo from Heartland Film Festival site.]




True Beauty This Night   US  10 minutes
 Director: Peter Besson

 "Last night, Rhett Somers met the love of his life. Now all he has to do is convince her she’s the one. Not an easy feat considering how they met…"


The True Beauty This Night blog says the film won the Best Short Award at the San Diego Film Festival.  And there's a long list of other prizes at other festivals. Besson also relates some frustration with someone who interpreted the film differently than he did in a Q&A after a showing in Ojai, California. 


Dan Ito at Festivus Film Festival tells us in the video that he liked True Beauty This Night.

Alaska Pacific University President Search Finalists

APU announced this morning:

The five finalists to be the 9th President of Alaska Pacific University and the dates of their campus visit are:
  • Dr. Betsy Vogel Boze, former Campus Dean and CEO Kent State University at Stark, North Canton, OH Monday & Tuesday November 16th & 17th

  • Ms. Bernice Joseph, Vice‐Chancellor Rural, Community & Native Education University of Alaska, Fairbanks, AK Thursday & Friday November 19th & 20th

  • Dr. Don Bantz, Academic Vice President & Provost Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA Monday & Tuesday November 23rd & 24th

  • Dr. J. Andy Sheppard, Academic Vice President Southwestern College, Winfield, KS Monday & Tuesday November 30th & December 1st

  • Dr. Steven Corey, Executive Vice President Prescott College, Prescott, AZ Thursday & Friday December 3rd & 4th

[Update  2:45pm: APU wants to keep the candidate review process in house.  It also turns out that one of the candidates is someone I know fairly well and I've met one, possibly two,  of the other candidates.  I'm used to the far more public process at UAA, but that is a public university and APU is private.  So I'll respect their decision  to only invite people in the immediate APU community to meet the candidates and await their further announcements.]

The Snow Knows


The snow knows who's been by.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Anchorage International Film Festival (AIFF) 2009 Starts December 4

The Anchorage International  Film Festival starts in a couple of weeks.  I'll be blogging it again, though this time I'm starting a little bit sooner so I can be a bit more prepared than last time.  (Maybe being prepared isn't an advantage here, not sure.) As we get into the festival, that will be my main focus here.


In any case, prior to the start I'm going to try to highlight the films in competition.  Basically, these are the films that have been selected, from among those submitted, to be eligible for prizes.  There are various categories of films and I wrote about that last year.  So if you want to know the difference between official selections, special selections, in competition,  as well as how movies are chosen,  you can go to What Do the Film Categories Mean?

I know there are lots of people out there who are barely aware - or not even that much - that the Festival is happening.  They really don't know what's playing and won't look at the schedule.  But there might be a film that would interest them - because it takes place in India ("One Day in Cochin" for example) or because it's about a topic of interest ("Son of the Sunshine" is about Tourettes and "East Planet" is a Japanese science fiction movie.)  I'll try to come up with some lists that people could scan quickly to see if there is something of special interest.

I'm also working to get up a post for each category, listing the films in competition.  These are the films from which the winners will be selected.

There are also some changes in venue.  Fireweed is no longer in the mix.  But new, not even finished theaters for the Alaska Experience in the Ship Creek Center (the old Post Office Mall) will be venues.  The Bear Tooth will be the center of action, and the Museum, Out North, and the Marston Theater at Loussac Library will also be used. 

You can go explore the Festival website on your own if you're so inclined.  There are also still plenty of chances to volunteer.  Don't be intimidated by the forms, this is just people doing things.

How Old Would You Be If You Were Born in 1909?

I get this Google search question several times a month, but I got these two inquiries just today:

"how old would you be if you were born in 1909"

"how old would u be if your born in 1909"

Arithmetic is largely a matter of learning 'tricks' for manipulating numbers. One such trick is the idea of adding or subtracting 10 or 100 or 1000 to a number. It's pretty elementary. I don't know how old these people are who are asking this question, but they are old enough to type into Google. (And if a parent typed it for them, why didn't the parent teach them the math instead of teaching them to let Google do their thinking for them?) Maybe one of these people is an adult, who votes. Scary isn't it? Actually, only one comes from the US, the other was from UK. (So no smirking Jay.)

9+10 = 19 19+10 = 29 29+10 = 39 39+10 = 49 49+10 = 59

90+100 = 190 190+100 = 290 290+100 = 390 390+100 = 490 490+100 = 590

1909+100 = 2009 2009+100 = 2109 2109+100 = 2209 2209+100 = 2309 2309+100 = 2409

59-10 = 49 49-10 = 39 39-10 = 29 29-10 = 19 19-10 = 9

Once you learn the pattern, you can just do it automatically. While some people have a natural gift for math, others simply have to work harder to get these tricks, but they're just tricks. And when you learn them, suddenly it makes sense. Just the way that you have to know how to use a key to unlock a door. That's a trick someone has to teach you. Once you learn it, it's easy.

I'm not making fun of, or blaming these searchers, but I am concerned about the quality of education and even parental guidance these people got. Not knowing how to do such a simple calculation may be one of the reasons NPR reported today that researchers found that half of Americans couldn't round up $2000 in 30 days. [And NPR now lets us embed their pieces here on the blog. Thanks NPR! Click below to listen to the segment.]
Well, if you don't know simple math, how can you know how much you are spending compared to how much you are taking in? Maybe it's not just greed as many people have thought, maybe it's ignorance.

While some people are caught in minimum wage jobs and raising kids and may have had some health problem wipe out their savings, many, I would guess, just thought that their credit cards were instant money, or that housing prices would go up forever, or just bought way more than they could afford. And these people use the same level of thinking when they decide on things like health care policy.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Tiny Black Bugs - Fruit Flies or Fungus Gnats?


In lieu of a dog or cat, we have various insects living at our house. Most prominent lately have been these tiny black flying things. But they're too small and too active to really get a decent picture. But this week I found one floating in a little water at the bottom of a cup on the table. These guys sometimes seem to come home with bananas and they like any kitchen scraps we haven't covered well before taking them out to the compost. And we're at the season change time when our backyard compost takes its winter break and we haven't quite gotten used to the garbage disposal yet.

But with a picture in hand, I finally called Cooperative Extension to see if I could identify the little critters. Because they liked the fruit he thought they might be fruit flies, but when he saw the picture he called to say they were Fungus Gnats.

He sent me a link to the Colorado State  Extension site where I learned:

Fungus gnats (Bradysia species) – also known as dark-winged fungus gnats, are small, mosquito-like insects often found in homes and offices, usually in the vicinity of houseplants. They are considered a nuisance when present in noticeable numbers, but the adults are harmless insects that do not bite. Fungus gnat larvae develop in the growing medium of houseplants and are considered minor pests of houseplants. . .

They are really small, I took another picture with a grain of uncooked rice floating next to it.
The most important strategy to minimize fungus gnat problems associated with houseplants is to allow the growing medium to dry between watering, especially the top 1 to 2 inches. The dry-growing medium will decrease survival of any eggs laid and/or larvae that hatch from the eggs as well as reduce the attractiveness of the growing medium to egg-laying adult females. In addition, it is recommended to re-pot every so often, particularly when the growing medium has “broken down” and is retaining too much moisture. Furthermore, be sure to remove any containers with an abundance of decaying plant matter such as decayed bulbs and roots, which provide an excellent food source for fungus gnat larvae. . .

 Want to see if there are larvae growing in your potted plant soil?  But do you really want to find these guys?  (The larvae picture - on a potato - is from the Colorado State site.)


"An effective means of detecting the presence of fungus gnat larvae is to insert 1/4 inch slices or wedges of potato into the growing medium. Larvae will migrate to the potato and start feeding within a few days. The potato slices should be turned over to look for larvae present on the underside."
And the fruit fly?  That looks totally different.  Picture and text are from an Oklahoma State webpage


Life Cycle: Female fruit flies lay their eggs on the surface of rotting fruits and vegetables. Each female may lay as many as 500 eggs. These eggs hatch into larvae which molt twice before becoming fully grown. The larvae feed on the yeast organisms and fungi growing in infested material, and through their feeding efforts, they soon turn their food into a semi-liquid "mess." When the full-grown larvae are ready to pupate, they leave the food material for dryer areas. Complete development from egg to adult under summer conditions may be completed in 8 to 10 days. Mating takes place soon after adult emergence, usually within a few hours, and egg laying begins about 24 hours later.
There's a lot more on the links if you want to know more.