Trump Frees Fraudster Just Days Into 7-Year Prison Sentence

posted in: All news | 0

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has set free a private equity executive who had served less than two weeks of a seven-year sentence for his role in what prosecutors described as a $1.6 billion scheme that defrauded thousands of victims.

David Gentile, 59, a onetime resident of Nassau County, New York, had reported to prison Nov. 14, and was released Wednesday, according to Bureau of Prisons records and a White House official who was not authorized to discuss the matter.

Gentile and a co-defendant, Jeffry Schneider, were convicted in August 2024 of securities and wire fraud charges, and sentenced in May.

Unlike a pardon, the commutation granted to Gentile will not necessarily erase penalties that could be associated with his conviction.

Schneider, who was sentenced to six years, does not appear to have received clemency from Trump.

In a social media post on Thanksgiving, Alice Marie Johnson, Trump’s “pardon czar,” said she was “deeply grateful to see David Gentile heading home to his young children.”

Trump has used the unfettered presidential clemency power to forgive an array of white-collar crimes and to make political points, including by casting prosecutions of his supporters as corrupt witch hunts like those that he claims had targeted him.

It was not immediately clear whether Gentile had connections to Trump or to the president’s supporters.

Lawyers for Gentile and Schneider declined to comment. Gentile did not respond to a request for comment.

In court filings, prosecutors said that Gentile and Schneider over several years used private equity funds controlled by Gentile’s company, GPB Capital, to defraud 10,000 investors by misrepresenting the performance of the funds and the source of money used to make monthly distribution payments.

More than 1,000 people submitted statements attesting to their losses, according to prosecutors, who characterized the victims as “hardworking, everyday people,” including small-business owners, farmers, veterans, teachers and nurses.

“I lost my whole life savings,” one wrote, adding, “I am living from check to check.”

In a statement after the sentencing in May, Joseph Nocella Jr., the U.S. attorney in the Eastern District of New York, said that Gentile and Schneider had “raised approximately $1.6 billion from individual investors based on false promises of generating investment returns from the profits of portfolio companies, all while using investor capital to pay distributions and create a false appearance of success.”

The sentences, Nocella added, were “a warning to would-be fraudsters that seeking to get rich by taking advantage of investors gets you only a one-way ticket to jail.”

But the White House official argued that prosecutors had falsely characterized the business as a Ponzi scheme. The official said that in 2015, GPB disclosed to investors the possibility that investor capital might be used to pay some distributions.

As of Saturday, the text of the commutation had yet to be posted on the Justice Department’s website.

It was not clear whether the commutation would affect any financial penalties.

In June, prosecutors asked the judge in the case to order Gentile to forfeit more than $15.5 million and Schneider to forfeit more than $12 million.

And in September, prosecutors indicated in a letter to the judge that a court-appointed receiver had access to more than $700 million, “which is likely to be distributed to investors.”

Civil claims against Gentile’s firm will continue, said Adam Gana, a lawyer who represents investors pursuing arbitration against GPB Capital.

“The stories that we’ve heard are just heartbreaking, and it’s just unbelievable that somebody like that would receive a commutation,” Gana said. “This is not a case that should be political. This guy belongs in prison.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Netanyahu Asks Israel’s President to Pardon Him in Corruption Cases

posted in: All news | 0

JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel asked its president Sunday to pardon him in his long-running corruption trial, a request that the president called “extraordinary” and that critics said would run counter to the rule of law.

Netanyahu’s unusual preemptive appeal to President Isaac Herzog, while his trial is still underway, came about two weeks after President Donald Trump sent a letter to Herzog urging him to pardon the Israeli prime minister.

A statement by the Israeli president’s office said the request would have “significant implications,” and that he would “responsibly and sincerely consider” it after seeking expert opinions.

Netanyahu said he believed that canceling his trial would help heal the divisions in Israeli society. But the immediate effect of the request appeared to amplify the rifts that have intensified over two years of war and his long battle with the judiciary.

Netanyahu was indicted in 2019 on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust in connection with three separate, but interlocking cases, and he has been on trial for five years. He has denied any wrongdoing in the cases, which center on accusations that he arranged favors for tycoons in exchange for gifts and sympathetic media coverage for himself and his family.

Soon after his request to the president was made public, Netanyahu explained his reasoning in a video statement. He said that he would have preferred to prove his innocence in court, but that the national interest demanded otherwise.

Citing Israel’s “security and political reality,” he called the requirement that he appear in court to testify three times a week “an impossible demand,” and he referred to Trump’s equally extraordinary interventions on his behalf as justification for seeking a pardon.

Israeli legal experts said such a request by a sitting Israeli prime minister was without precedent and subverted the principle of equality before the law, a cornerstone of Israeli democracy.

Netanyahu said he believed that ending his trial would help foster national unity at a time when Israel urgently needs it, after two years of war.

But the request for clemency, like the graft trial itself, is more likely to prove divisive before national elections scheduled to be held by late October. By law, Netanyahu may run in the next election as long has he has not been convicted after exhausting an appeals process.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

The snow storms are done. Now brace for the cold.

posted in: All news | 0

Snowstorm bumper cars are no longer a concern for now, a weather expert says.

But in the wake of the recent storm, which dumped a significant amount of snow on the metro, residents have another worry: potentially perilous cold.

“We had a long duration light to moderate snowstorm,” said Jake Beitlich, meteorologist with the National Weather Service.“It snowed 36-48 hours and while it wasn’t really heavy snow and the winds weren’t strong, we still saw 5 to 6 inches of snow across the south metro and 4 to 5 inches across the north metro.”

There aren’t any more significant snow storms in the next few weeks, but the big thing is the cold temperatures, he said.

“Cold air is moving in and with the fresh snow pack that is a recipe for really cold nights,” he said.

Related Articles


St. Paul declares snow emergency


Joe Soucheray: You mean cold like in Yakutsk, Siberia?


More snow on the way: Here’s how much we could get this weekend


Falling tree kills northeastern Minnesota man clearing snow after storm


Season’s first snowstorm arrives; drivers should expect slippery roads

Monday morning will be “chilly” with temperatures in the mid single-digits in the Metro and outside the Twin Cities, the mercury will drop to zero or slightly below zero, he said.

A strong chill is expected Wednesday night where everyone in the metro will be below zero and cities outside the metro will potentially see 10 to 15 degrees below zero.

Because of the frigid temperatures, Beitlich said it was a good idea for motorists to keep a jacket and hat in their vehicles, and have their phones charged.

“We said winter was going to be moving in — and it has,” he said.

Because of the cold, residents should expect to see the snow that has fallen sticking around, making the likelihood of a white Christmas a possibility.

“We are leaning towards it,” he said. “The odds are in your favor.”

4 Dead, Including 3 Children, After Shooting at Banquet Hall in California

posted in: All news | 0

A shooting Saturday night at a birthday party in California’s Central Valley left four people dead and 11 others injured, the local sheriff’s office said.

About 15 people were shot near a shopping plaza in Stockton, California, Heather Brent of the San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Office said Sunday.

Three children, ages 8, 9, and 14, were killed, along with a 21-year-old adult, Brent said. She did not give further details about them.

Several gunshot victims were transported to hospitals in the area. A spokesperson for Sutter Health Memorial Medical Center in Modesto, about 35 miles from the shooting scene, said there were three injured adults from the shooting in the hospital’s care.

The victims were believed to have been attending the party at a catering hall when the shooting occurred, Brent said, adding that early indications suggested that the attack was targeted and not random.

As of late morning Sunday, no suspect was in custody, she said.

“Our investigations team is working around the clock to pursue all possibilities,” she said.

A local faith group announced that it would hold a prayer vigil near the site of the shooting around 3 p.m. Sunday.

The office of Gov. Gavin Newsom of California said on social media that his Office of Emergency Services was monitoring the situation in Stockton and coordinating with local law enforcement.

Ron Freitas, the district attorney for San Joaquin County, said Saturday night that the Stockton Police Department, the California Highway Patrol and other agencies were assisting the sheriff’s office with the investigation.

Stockton, a city of about 320,000, is about 50 miles south of the state capital, Sacramento, and roughly 100 miles northeast of San Francisco.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.