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2 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK 3 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - X 4 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, : CR 96 1016(S-1) 5 v. : U.S. Courthouse 6 Uniondale, New York BRUCE W. GORDON, WHO'S WHO 7 WORLD WIDE REGISTRY, INC., : STERLING WHO'S WHO, INC., 8 TARA GARBOSKI, ORAL FRANK OSMAN, LAURA WEITZ, ANNETTE 9 HALEY, SCOTT MICHAELSON, : ,, and MARTIN 10 REFFSIN, : TRANSCRIPT OF TRIAL 11 Defendants. : February 2, 1998 12 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - X 9:30 o'clock a.m. 13 14 BEFORE: 15 HONORABLE ARTHUR D. SPATT, U.S.D.J. 16 APPEARANCES: 17 For the Government: ZACHARY W. CARTER 18 United States Attorney One Pierrepont Plaza 19 Brooklyn, New York 11201 By: RONALD G. WHITE 20 CECIL SCOTT Assistant U.S. Attorneys 21 For the Defendants: NOR
MAN TRABULUS, ESQ. 22 For Bruce W. Gordon 170 Old Country Road, Suite 600 23 Mineola, New York 11501 24 EDWARD P. JENKS, ESQ. For Who's Who, Sterling 25 332 Willis Avenue Mineola, New York 11501
OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER
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1 GARY SCHOER, ESQ. 2 For Tara Garboski 6800 Jericho Turnpike 3 Syosset, New York 11791
4 ALAN M. NELSON, ESQ. For Oral Frank Osman 5 3000 Marcus Avenue Lake Success, New York 11042 6 WINSTON LEE, ESQ. 7 For Laura Weitz 319 Broadway 8 New York, New York 10007
9 MARTIN GEDULDIG, ESQ. For Annette Haley 10 400 South Oyster Bay Road Hicksville, New York 11801 11 JAMES C. NEVILLE, ESQ. 12 For Scott Michaelson 225 Broadway 13 New York, New York 10007
14 THOMAS F.X. DUNN, For , 15 150 Nassau Street
New York, New York 10038 16 JOHN S. WALLENSTEIN, ESQ. 17 For Mart
in Reffsin 215 Hilton Avenue 18 Hempstead, New York 11551
19
Court Reporter: Owen M. Wicker, RPR 20 United States District Court
Two Uniondale Avenue 21 Uniondale, New York 11553 (516) 292-6963 22
23 Proceedings recorded by mechanical stenography, transcript produced by computer-assisted transcription. 24 25 OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 2282 1 (Case called.) 2 MR. WHITE: Your Honor, before the jury comes in 3 I wanted to ask the Court's permission if we could 4 interrupt the testimony again of Agent Rosenblatt and put 5 on a couple other witnesses. Among the ones I told the 6 defense attorney would be in here today, two witnesses 7 have to leave town tonight, they are in from out of town, 8 and I would imagine if we wait until we finish 9 Mr. Rosenblatt they may not get on today. 10 THE COURT: Yes.
11 MR. WHITE: Thank you. 12 (Jury enters.) 13 THE COURT: Good morning, members of the jury. 14 Please be seated. 15 Again, my compliments. It was 9:30 on the nose 16 when we got the signal. Of course for a few days you were 17 here even before 9:30, that's even better than 9:30, but 18 I'll settle for 9:30. 19 I have distressing news for you. You will not be 20 here on Friday. I would like to have you here on Friday, 21 you know that because I like to keep the trial going and I 22 like your company besides. But try as I could, I could 23 not arrange my schedule to do away with all the other 24 cases that I already put on for Friday that are clamoring 25 for my attention while I'm busy for this trial. OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 2283 Rieger-direct/Scott 1 So we'll not be working on this trial on Friday.
2 You may make arrangements to go to work. 3 All right. You may proceed.
4 MS. SCOTT: Thank you, Your Honor. 5 The government calls Rita Rieger.
6 R I T A R I E G E R , having been first duly sworn by 7 the Clerk of the Court, was examined and testified as 8 follows: 9 THE WITNESS: My name is Rita Rieger, 10 R-I-E-G-E-R. 11 THE COURT: Members of the jury, I told you that 12 we will interrupt from time to time to take another 13 witness. This is one of the occasions we are 14 interrupting. Mr. Rosenblatt, as you remember, was on the 15 stand. 16 DIRECT EXAMINATION 17 BY MS. SCOTT: 18 Q Good morning, Ms. Rieger. 19 Can you tell us where you live? 20 A Folsom, California. 21 THE COURT: How do you spell that? 22 THE WITNESS: F-O-L-S-O-M. Outside Sacramento. 23 THE COURT: Okay. 24 BY MS. SCOTT: 25 Q And what do you
do for a living? OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER
2284 Rieger-direct/Scott 1 A I'm a pharmacist. 2 Q What does your
job involve? 3 A Interpreting prescriptions, returning medications and
4 dispensing them with information to the patient. 5 Q How long have you been doing
that? 6 A Since 1959. 7 Q Have you ever been contacted by a company called
8 Who's Who Worldwide? 9 A Yes, I have. 10 Q And did you eventually
purchase a membership from 11 them? 12 A Yes, I did. 13 Q Can you tell us approximately when you were first 14 contacted by them? 15 A I think it was 1993. 16 Q And how were you contacted? 17 A By telephone at work. 18 Q How many times were you contacted? 19 A More than once, and I can't be sure -- I can't be 20 sure of the total number of times. 21 Q How is it that y
ou remember you were contacted at 22 work? 23 A Because it is unusual to be approached about a 24 business proposition of any kind at work. 25 Q Do you remember the name of the person who called OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 2285 Rieger-direct/Scott 1 you? 2 A I thought he said his name was Michael. 3 Q What happened in the course of your conversations 4 with him? 5 A I believe the first time he called, it was not a good 6 time to talk because of the flow of our business, and I 7 asked him if he could call me back and he did. 8 Q And when you -- did you eventually -- 9 MR. LEE: Your Honor, I have an objection. 10 THE COURT: Objection to which, the last 11 question? 12 MR. LEE: As to statements of someone that may 13 qualify as hearsay unless there is a foundation laid for 14 that foundation coming
in. 15 THE COURT: Well, you will have to identify who 16 this was. 17 MS. SCOTT: Your Honor, I believe it has been 18 established that the call came from Who's Who Worldwide or 19 at least that the person identified themselves as 20 representing Who's Who Worldwide. 21 THE WITNESS: That's correct. 22 THE COURT: They did? 23 THE WITNESS: Yes, they did. 24 THE COURT: All right. Overruled. 25 BY MS. SCOTT: OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 2286 Rieger-direct/Scott 1 Q Now, did you eventually have a conversation with this 2 person? 3 A Yes, I did. 4 Q What happened in that conversation? 5 A Well, this individual told me that I had been 6 nominated by a known benefactor. 7 THE COURT: You say the name of the person who 8 spoke to you was Michael? 9 THE WITNESS: That's as I recall it.
10 THE COURT: You don't know the last name or any 11 other name for the person? 12 THE WITNESS: I can't retrieve that information. 13 It's in moving boxes. I have it written down or I can't 14 find it. 15 THE COURT: And you don't remember where it is? 16 THE WITNESS: No, Your Honor. 17 THE COURT: Come up, Counsel. 18 (Side bar.) 19 THE COURT: Since I assume this is going to be 20 similar testimony by a number of witnesses, how do you 21 propose to get it in although it is from Who's Who 22 which is a defendant in the case. You have to identify 23 somebody who said this who would be authorized or at least 24 in the course of whose employment they would make that 25 statement. Can't be just a person named -- who is OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 2287 Rieger-direct/Scott 1 Michael. 2 MS. SCOTT: Your Honor
, this is a typical call 3 from an unknown person to sell a product and I think most 4 of the witnesses will not be able to remember the name of 5 the person they spoke with. What we'll be able to offer 6 is documents they received as follow up to the telephone 7 calls. 8 THE COURT: You better offer the documents -- 9 well, I assume you are offering this under 801(d)(2). 10 MR. WHITE: Yes, as both a corporate admission 11 and as a co-conspirator statement, Your Honor. 12 THE COURT: But you have to identify somebody. 13 You can't say I'm from Who's Who Worldwide and I confess 14 to four murders. That will not fly with me. 15 Let's look at the rule. 16 MR. WHITE: Okay. 17 THE COURT: The rule says, because this is going 18 to be repetitious and we might as well iron it out right 19 now. 20 The rule says statements that are not hearsay, if 21 th
e statement is not hearsay if, subdivision (2), a 22 statement is offered against a party and is a statement by 23 the party's agent -- who am I talking to, the both of you. 24 MR. WHITE: Yes. 25 MS. SCOTT: Yes. OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 2288 Rieger-direct/Scott 1 THE COURT: Within the scope of the agency or 2 employment made during the existence of the relationship, 3 or a statement by a co-conspirator of a party. 4 Now, let's look at what the law is on this agent 5 and employees. (Perusing.) 6 According to the authoritative test, 7 Weissenberger's on Federal Evidence, did I tell you that 8 was authoritative before? 9 MR. WHITE: Yes, I did. 10 THE COURT: The proponent of the vicarius 11 admission must establish a foundation that demonstrates 12 that the declarant at the time of the making of the 13 statement wasn't an employee or the agent of the party 14 against whom the statement was offered. For example, 15 statements made after the employment has concluded do not 16 qualify. 17 Now otherwise you meet the rule, but I'm unsure 18 about whether some -- a party we don't know about, not 19 identified that that's within 801(d)(2). You say you have 20 some corroborating material. 21 MS. SCOTT: We have exhibits which have been 22 received in connection with this deal she made on the 23 telephone, this witness. 24 MR. WHITE: Your Honor, there are two different 25 issues. With respect to the corporate admission, I think OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 2289 Rieger-direct/Scott 1 even if we don't identify the person yet, we can, but even 2 if we don't yet, the circumstances suggest the facts that 3 form the foundation,. In other words, someone calls up, 4 identifies themselves, at least she remembers only part of 5 the name, says they are from Who's Who Worldwide, conduct 6 a discussion which is toward the view of purchasing a 7 membership. He tells the customer all the things we'll 8 subsequently know who are the basic sales pitch of Who's 9 Who. The customer consummates a transaction, the customer 10 gives the credit card number and shortly thereafter 11 receives confirmation in the mail. 12 THE COURT: You are talking very rapidly and you 13 are losing me. 14 MR. WHITE: I'm sorry. 15 THE COURT: My mind, as I told you a number of 16 times which apparently you don't believe, my mind doesn't 17 work as fast as you do. 18 MR. WHITE: Your Honor, this is the first time 19 during the entire trial you asked me to slow down. 20 THE COURT: Then join the crowd. 21 So under your theory, if a janitor picked up the 22 phone and called this lady and said I want to sell you a 23 trip to the moon or give you a trip to the moon if you buy 24 this, do you think this will be admissible? 25 MR. WHITE: No, Your Honor, but the fact it is OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 2290 Rieger-direct/Scott 1 followed up in the normal course but he takes her credit 2 card number, she gets an invoice, she gets certain things, 3 that suggests the regularity of it, that was someone who 4 was authorized to make the sale. I would add as well on 5 this one there are internal company documents, documents 6 this customer does not see that identifies the person who 7 made the sale. 8 MR. JENKS: Except how will he get them in? I 9 will not stipulate to them and not in the regular course 10 of business. You should have someone from Who's Who 11 Worldwide. 12 THE COURT: You have to talk like a technician. 13 Right now I have doubt whether this call from an unknown 14 person will satisfy the rule. You are using this for the 15 most incriminating material. This is the real substance 16 of the case and I'll not allow it at this time unless you 17 show who this is. 18 MR. WHITE: Your Honor, let me back up further. 19 On this particular one, the internal paperwork of the 20 company indicates that the salesperson who spoke to 21 Ms. Rieger was Scott Michaelson, one of the defendants. 22 She just remembers the guy as "Michael." 23 THE COURT: You better lay a foundation by 24 bringing that material in. If you want to bring this 25 conversation in, I'm telling you now I will not allow it OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 2291 Rieger-direct/Scott 1 unless you identify who it was. 2 MR. WHITE: You are talking on the corporate 3 admission theory? 4 THE COURT: On either admission, corporate or 5 individual. They are individuals also, they can make 6 admissions. 7 MR. WHITE: Your Honor, I don't think it is 8 necessary that the person has to specifically, you know, 9 identify who they are to you. 10 THE COURT: You don't, but I do. 11 MR. LEE: Judge, I think -- 12 THE COURT: You show me a case that says an 13 unknown person calls up and makes these statements for a 14 corporation. Show me a case like that. I'm not going to 15 allow it. 16 MR. WHITE: Wait, Your Honor. It's not so much 17 that the person is unknown. I thought Your Honor's 18 objection, Your Honor's identification where it was 19 lacking was we haven't shown that the person had authority 20 to do that. 21 THE COURT: That's only part of it. I don't even 22 know who this person is. It's an unknown person. You 23 will have this unknown person making all of these 24 admissions? Not with me you're not. Especially when you 25 say you can identify the person. OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 2292 Rieger-direct/Scott 1 MR. WHITE: But Your Honor I think when a person 2 calls up under those circumstances, the circumstances 3 suggest that they were authorized to do that. If, for 4 example, they called up and then nothing ever happened, 5 this person was lied to and nothing ever happened, you 6 might suggest maybe the person was unauthorized, maybe 7 they were the janitor as you said. 8 But where the sale is actually consummated, where 9 the person is following a script and then the normal 10 business paperwork confirming the sale is received by the 11 customer, I think all the cir
cumstances suggest that the 12 person was authorized. 13 THE COURT: I don't see any circumstances at this 14 point that anybody -- it's not a question only of 15 authorization, it's a question of identification of a 16 person. This could be a complete stranger calling up, and 17 I'm sure it isn't, but I don't know who this is and I'm 18 not going to allow it, period. 19 MR. WHITE: But, Your Honor, is it not also from 20 the face of it a co-conspirator's statement? In other 21 words, what she -- 22 THE COURT: Not an unknown person it isn't. 23 MR. WHITE: But, Your Honor, it's not unknown 24 yet. It is someone named Michael who is a salesman at 25 Who's Who Worldwide. OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 2293 Rieger-direct/Scott 1 THE COURT: Who said he was a salesman for 2 Barbara Walters Worldwide. I don't know who he is.
3 MR. WHITE: She would testify that he called up 4 to sell her a membership, and that's what it is. 5 THE COURT: Mr. White, let's not prolong this. 6 You've heard my ruling and there is nothing you've told me 7 that will change it. You have to identify those people. 8 If you want their conversations to come in you will have 9 to identify them. 10 MR. JENKS: Further, Judge -- 11 THE COURT: You want to talk me out of it? 12 MR. JENKS: No. 13 THE COURT: I see. 14 MR. JENKS: I'm going to make the next 15 objection. He's going to try to introduce the witness 16 with corporate documents and receipts, which I assume is 17 the next part of this witness' testimony. Unless those 18 corporate documents, records and receipts are shown to be 19 made within the regular course of business of Who's Who 20 Worldwide Registry, Inc., and it was the regular course of
21 business of Who's Who Worldwide to maintain and keep the 22 records, I object to the documents as hearsay. 23 He has to have a document custodian to introduce 24 the documents. The mere fact she got a bill in the mail 25 is not indicative of anything. OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 2294 Rieger-direct/Scott 1 THE COURT: We will see when they are offered. 2 MR. NELSON: Your Honor, if I might. Alan 3 Nelson. 4 Your Honor, I have a separate objection to raise 5 as it relates to my client Frank Osman. 6 THE COURT: Good. I might consider it and rule 7 otherwise on the whole thing if you talk me out of it. 8 MR. NELSON: That's not my intention, Judge. 9 Mr. Osman has alleged to have been a member of 10 the conspiracy from up to a period of time in November of 11 1992 and not to agree to join the conspiracy up until
12 November of 1994. These documents based upon a review of 13 the documents indicate they were prepared sometime in 1993 14 when he would not have been a member of the conspiracy. 15 THE COURT: So what? 16 MR. NELSON: I object to their admission as it 17 relates to him. 18 THE COURT: Overruled. He can go out of the 19 conspiracy, come back and join it for one hour and be 20 criminally liable for everything. 21 MR. NELSON: Not unless he adopts what prior 22 happened. 23 THE COURT: No, if he knowingly and willfully 24 joined the conspiracy, not for an hour, for a minute. 25 MR. NELSON: I understand, but the government OWEN M. WICKER, RPR OFFICIAL COURT REPORTER 2295 Rieger-direct/Scott 1 would have to demonstrate he reentered with knowledge. 2 THE COURT: I understand, willingly, 3 intentionally, knowingly, any other words? If he knew 4 what this conspiracy is, the criminal purpose and joins it 5 at 12:01 and leaves at 12:03, he's in. 6 MR. WHITE: Your Honor, here's what I propose we 7 do. Your Honor, I was going to try to think how we would 8 proceed now. For virtually every witness the government 9 intends to call there is internal paperwork of the firm 10 that identifies the person they spoke to even if they 11 don't recall what their name was. Yes, they got away with all his and more. What a circus.
The Who's Who Worldwide Registry websites are focused on the Who's Who Worldwide Registry tragedy, and the matching scandals of identifiable government and judicial corruption in one of the more embarassing federal trials of the 20th Century and all the many months of media silence regarding this incredible story.
Sixteen weeks of often tiresome, and sometimes just explosive in shattering tales of greed and worse during testimony, yet not a word in any of 1200 news archives. This alone supports the claim that this was a shamefully corrupt federal trial; in fact, one of the most corrupted federal trials in our time.
Show your support for justice, for exoneration of the innocent, and perhaps most importantly, government accountability, by urgently contacting your Senator, the White House, and the U.S. Department of Justice.
"URGENT" is a very specific request for you to take action, because action is the only way to get help.You're invited to use your phone.
Free the "Who's Whoers" It hurts. Your action helps, so please do take the action, before this long, tremendously challenging day is through
.
Genuinely Federal Trials To Be Ashamed Of - The Who's Who Tragedy
This site is concerned with the Who's Who Worldwide Registry tragedy, and the double scandal of government and judical corruption in one of the most corrupted federal trials and all the many months of media silence regarding this incredible story.
Sixteen weeks of oft-explosive testimony, yet not a word in any of 1200 news archives. This alone supports the claim that this was a shamefully corrupt federal trial; in fact, one of the most corrupted federal trials.
Show your support for justice, for exoneration of the innocent, and perhaps most importantly, government accountability, by urgently contacting your Senator, the White House, and the U.S. Department of Justice.
The Who's Who Tragedy How Thomas FX Dunn demonstrated himself to be the Scofulous Lawyer Of All Most Corrupted Federal Trials
Dirtiest Trials of the Most Recent Century - Justice Has Gone South
How rare it is to find a case that can offer not merely two or three, instead, more than a dozen major reasons for overturning that conviction. Here is a case studied by a respected federal judge for many months, who found that no crime had been committed, and dismissed the case.
Reed Elsevier, Ltd, as the single richest and most powerful publisher in more than one hundred countries around the world,
easily. empirically and truthfully described as one of the most corrupt corporations in all of human history,
perverted the foundations of American justice in the Who's Who Worldwide case with cash, power, and perqs.
Imagine a trial where not ten percent of the proceedings have ANY connection with most of the defendants.
That alone should require a separation of trial. In this case, NOT EVEN ONE PERCENT of the proceedings,
accusations, presented evidence, or accepted facts, had anything to do with the "sales" defendants.
The Who's Who Worldwide case was all about Bruce Gordon, his machinations and his accountant,
and the many companies operated in secrecy by Gordon and Liz Sauter, his true "henchman."
For days and days and weeks and weeks, all the discussion was about Gordon and his actions.
Prosecution witness after prosecution witness exculpated the sales defendants, yet,
this same judge who had previously dismissed the case after months of study,
was under one of the worst pressures any judge can be subjected to:
pressure from the federal court of appeals above him, who, in
New York's bailiwick, remains under the control of....
Reed Elsevier, the most powerful force today
in the American arena of jurisprudence.
This can be fixed by Presidential Pardon.
Call 202-456-1414 to lift your voice.
Most Corrupted Federal Trials Worst attorneys in America Thomas FX Dunn