The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Man gets new mortgage fraud trial because of sleeping lawyer

- By Joe Mandak

PITTSBURGH >> A businessma­n will get a new trial on mortgage fraud charges because his defense attorney was seen sleeping by the judge, witnesses and the federal court jurors who convicted him last year.

U.S. District Judge Donetta Ambrose ruled James Nassida was denied a fair trial because Stan Levenson dozed during the October trial. Levenson has acknowledg­ed that he fell asleep because he was taking cold medicines that made him drowsy.

Because Levenson was seen sleeping several times during the October trial he “therefore was not functionin­g as counsel during a substantia­l portion of Mr. Nassida’s trial, thus violating Defendant Nassida’s Sixth Amendment rights” to a fair trial and legal representa­tion, the judge wrote on Monday.

Nassida’s new attorney, James Brink, called the ruling “fair and well-reasoned” in an email on Tuesday. The new trial will begin Sept. 5.

Nassida founded Century III Home Equity, a lending firm in Pittsburgh’s South Hills suburbs, in 1994.

Federal prosecutor­s contend he inflated his clients’ incomes and assets and used fake property appraisals to help those borrowers get millions of dollars’ worth of fraudulent mortgage loans. Nassida’s firm received fees for the loans — as many as 700 a year — which Nassida used to pay for a lavish lifestyle including a house worth $1.3 million, a ski resort vacation home and luxury cars.

His sister, Janna Nassida, was tried on charges she aided in the scheme. She killed herself shortly after she and her brother were convicted last fall.

Levenson’s sleeping was first brought to the judge’s attention by Assistant U.S. Attorney Cindy Chung.

Levenson has told reporters and testified at a posttrial hearing in April that he slept during the trial, and he asked for a mistrial, which Ambrose refused to grant, preferring to see what verdict the jury returned. After the jury convicted Nassida, the judge questioned the jurors under oath, and all acknowledg­ed seeing Levenson sleeping or, at least, discussing it with other jurors who had.

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