Los Angeles Times

Avenatti ordered jailed after arrest at state bar court

Celebrity attorney has bail revoked on claims he defrauded creditors while awaiting trial.

- By Michael Finnegan

A federal judge revoked the bail of Los Angeles attorney Michael Avenatti on Wednesday and ordered him jailed while awaiting trial on three indictment­s, saying new allegation­s of fraud and money laundering show he poses a danger to the public.

Judge James V. Selna of U.S. District Court in Santa Ana agreed with prosecutor­s that it appeared Avenatti had broken federal and state laws by hiding $1 million from one of his ex-wives and other creditors after his arrest in March.

Avenatti was escorted out of the courtroom by a uniformed U.S. marshal. His first criminal trial, on charges that he tried to extort more than $20 million from sports giant Nike, is set to begin next week in New York federal court.

Avenatti was taken into custody Tuesday afternoon at a California State Bar Court hearing. The state bar is seeking to block him from practicing law while he faces bank fraud, tax evasion and other charges in the three federal indictment­s. Prosecutor­s have accused him of stealing millions from his own clients.

In court documents unsealed Wednesday, federal prosecutor­s allege that Avenatti received the $1 million in legal fees in April as part of a client’s settlement but concealed the money from his second ex-wife, Lisa Storie Avenatti, tax collectors and other creditors.

Avenatti, who gained fame as the lawyer for adult film star Stormy Daniels, has denied wrongdoing.

His lawyer, H. Dean Steward, acknowledg­ed at the court hearing Wednesday that Avenatti tried to keep his creditors from getting the $1 million but thought everything he did was legal. Steward said that Avenatti was working to pay off his debts and that no law required him to do so in any specific order.

“He’s done as well as he can on that, but he’s way behind, no doubt about that,” Steward told the judge.

Avenatti was one of President Trump’s fiercest critics on cable news for months after Daniels went public in 2018 with her allegation that Trump had paid her $130,000 to keep quiet about their alleged one-night stand. Avenatti briefly considered running for president but since then has been mired in legal and financial troubles.

After the Nike case concludes, he will face a second federal trial in New York on charges that he stole from Daniels by skimming money from her deal to write a memoir detailing her alleged affair with Trump.

After that, Avenatti is to be tried in Santa Ana federal court on the most sweeping of the three cases. He is accused of fraud, perjury, failure to pay taxes, embezzleme­nt and other financial crimes. Prosecutor­s allege he stole millions of dollars from five clients and used a tangle of shell companies and bank accounts to cover up the theft.

In the new court papers, prosecutor­s describe elaborate steps Avenatti allegedly took to hide the $1 million he received five weeks after his arrest last year by shifting it through multiple bank accounts and splitting it into a carefully timed sequence of cashier’s checks.

Avenatti used the money to cover rent on his luxury apartment in Century City, pay his legal bills and buy a $50,000 MercedesBe­nz,

according to the court documents.

He initially tried to buy the car in his own name but then worked with his first exwife, Christine Avenatti Carlin, to put it in her name instead, prosecutor­s allege. He drew from the $1 million to pay his personal driver, they said.

“Everything he does is to keep the money in his own pockets and not pay the people who have court-ordered judgments against him,” Assistant U.S. Atty. Brett A. Sagel told the judge at the hearing.

Avenatti also used the money to pay membership fees to Exclusive Resorts, an elite vacation club with luxury properties in Florida, New York and California, where he stayed at least four times after his initial arrest, prosecutor­s allege. He allowed a girlfriend to stay at an Exclusive Resorts property in Italy, they said.

Prosecutor­s noted that Avenatti had an Italian passport when he was arrested last year and said his girlfriend’s trip to Tuscany raised questions about whether he’d hidden assets in Europe.

At the time Avenatti was spending the $1 million, according to the court document, he personally owed Lisa Storie-Avenatti about $2.5 million under spousal and child-support court orders. He was also under court order to pay a $5-million judgment to his former law partner Jason Frank as well as a $2.2-million judgment to a former Santa Barbara County client, William Parrish.

Since at least May, Avenatti “has brazenly attempted to defraud and conceal his assets from these creditors,” prosecutor­s argued in the papers they filed to secure an arrest warrant Tuesday.

Avenatti’s lawyers accused prosecutor­s of abusing their power to help Frank collect the money that Avenatti owes him, saying one of the assistant U.S. attorneys on the case was a friend and former colleague of Frank’s law partner Andrew Stolper, a former prosecutor. Prosecutor­s denied the allegation.

One of the conditions of Avenatti’s bail was that he not violate federal, state or local laws while awaiting trial.

Prosecutor­s said it appeared Avenatti’s hiding of the $1 million had broken federal wire and mail fraud laws, as well as a federal law that bars the structurin­g of bank withdrawal­s to evade reporting to the government of currency transactio­ns above $10,000.

It also seemed to violate California fraud and moneylaund­ering laws and a Washington state fraud law, they argued. Avenatti personally owed Washington tax authoritie­s more than $1.5 million because of the failure of his defunct coffee business to pay its payroll taxes, prosecutor­s said.

At the end of the court hearing, Judge Selna said he agreed with prosecutor­s that Avenatti’s handling of the $1 million was probably illegal. He said he also agreed that Avenatti posed an economic danger to the public if he remained free on bail, because he was likely to keep committing crimes.

“I believe that the danger to the community is real and palpable,” Selna said.

 ?? Spencer Platt Getty Images ?? ATTORNEY Michael Avenatti illegally tried to hide $1 million from creditors while awaiting trials on three separate federal indictment­s, prosecutor­s say.
Spencer Platt Getty Images ATTORNEY Michael Avenatti illegally tried to hide $1 million from creditors while awaiting trials on three separate federal indictment­s, prosecutor­s say.

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