Baltimore Sun

Mosby’s attorney has own legal woes

Bolden says he can’t represent ex-state’s attorney because he might be in trouble, too

- By Alex Mann

A. Scott Bolden, the lawyer leading former Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby’s federal criminal defense, can no longer represent her because he might soon be in legal trouble too, he said in a court filing Wednesday explaining why he wants off the case.

Last Thursday, all six attorneys representi­ng Mosby asked to be removed from the case and to have the city’s former top prosecutor represente­d by the federal public defender.

Federal prosecutor­s said they’re fine with Bolden withdrawin­g from the case but argued the remaining five attorneys — including three from Bolden’s firm, Reed Smith LLP — should remain on the case to avoid another postponeme­nt of Mosby’s trial, slated for March.

U.S. District Judge Lydia Kay Griggsby scheduled a video hearing Friday to determine whether she’ll allow the defense attorneys to quit the case. Griggsby also ordered Maryland’s federal public defender, James Wyda, appear at the hearing.

The developmen­t comes after Griggsby threatened Jan. 17 to hold Bolden in criminal contempt of court for violating court rules, like divulging confidenti­al juror informatio­n in public legal paper and filing motion without the signature of a Maryland attorney, as Bolden is not licensed to practice in the state. Griggsby also took exception to Bolden’s use of profanity to criticize the second postponeme­nt of the case, calling it “bulls---” on the courthouse steps.

In separate filings this week, Mosby’s lawyers offered differing reasons for why they wanted off the case, pushing back on prosecutor­s’ objections.

Bolden said it would be unfair for him to continue representi­ng Mosby because his interests are now divided between defending Mosby and himself. The other lawyers from his firm — Rizwan Qureshi, Kelley Miller and Anthony Todd — said they shared Bolden’s conflict of interest.

Bolden and his colleagues at Reed Smith said in the filing Thursday that they are now preparing for trial “under the shadow of a threatened criminal contempt hearing.”

“Preparatio­n for his own defense means that Mr. Bolden cannot spend as much time as would typically be expected and required of lead defense counsel in the business of managing a trial,” Bolden, Qureshi, Miller and Todd wrote. “Far more importantl­y, it would be unconscion­able to insist that Ms. Mosby receive legal advice and representa­tion that she might reasonably imagine is colored by Mr. Bolden’s desire to seek the Court’s favor in his own proceeding.”

Griggsby ordered Bolden to explain by Jan. 31 why she should not refer him to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for criminal prosecutio­n for contempt.

In its opposition, the government disputed that there is a conflict at all, arguing the issue of whether Bolden will be held in contempt of court is separate from Mosby’s criminal case. But if there is a conflict, federal prosecutor­s said, it applies to Bolden and not to any of the other lawyers from his firm.

Attorneys Gary Proctor and Lucius Outlaw joined Mosby’s defense more recently — free of charge — and said they did so with the understand­ing they’d only play supporting roles, not those of lead lawyers.

In his own filing, Outlaw said his responsibi­lities

as a professor at Howard University School of Law mean he couldn’t lead a defense team at trial.

Proctor, meanwhile, said he wasn’t even planning to attend Mosby’s trial — and that Mosby knew this — because he had previously planned and paid for internatio­nal travel for a family gathering.

Both Outlaw and Proctor said they’d be willing to continue to defend Mosby in secondary roles if Griggsby reschedule­s her trial.

Mosby, a Democrat who left office in January after two terms, is charged with two counts of perjury and two counts of making false statements on loan applicatio­ns for a pair of properties in Florida: An eight-bedroom house near Disney World and a condo on the state’s Gulf Coast.

Federal prosecutor­s say Mosby falsely claimed to have experience­d “adverse financial consequenc­es” because of the coronaviru­s pandemic to make her eligible for two early withdrawal­s from her city retirement account. She used the roughly $80,000 from obtained from her savings through the CARES Act, Congress’ first pandemic relief package, to make down payments on the Florida properties.

To secure a lower interest rate on her mortgage, Mosby claimed the house near Orlando was a second home when she’d already lined up management company to run it in a rental, according to her indictment. She also neglected to tell lenders that she owed the federal government money for unpaid taxes.

In their filing Saturday, prosecutor­s said any one of the six lawyers could defend Mosby on their own because “the charges and the evidence in this case are not complicate­d.”

“This is not a case involving sophistica­ted financial transactio­ns, multiple defendants or complex charges,” prosecutor­s wrote. “It is a case of single defendant lying on four separate occasions about her personal finances in order to buy two houses in Florida.”

 ?? LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Former Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby leaves federal court with her husband, Nick Mosby, and lawyer, A. Scott Bolden, in September.
LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN Former Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby leaves federal court with her husband, Nick Mosby, and lawyer, A. Scott Bolden, in September.

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