New Jersey deli scammer James Patten sentencing document filed
Courtroom sketch of James Patten, left, and attorney Ira Sorkin at N.J. District Court in Camden, N.J., Oct. 11, 2022
Source: Elizabeth Williams
Federal prosecutors are recommending a relatively light prison sentence for a man who pleaded guilty to securities fraud in the notorious $100 million New Jersey deli stock manipulation case — and some of their reasons for doing so are hidden.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for New Jersey, in a new court filing, conceded that the sentencing guidelines suggest a prison term between 70 and 87 months for the defendant, James Patten.
But the office is urging U.S. District Court Judge Christine O’Hearn to send the 65-year-old Patten to prison for a term between 12 and 18 months when she sentences him in Camden on July 21. He’s been free awaiting sentencing since he pleaded guilty in late 2023.
Prosecutors, in a version of that submission made public at CNBC’s request, cited federal criminal law, which calls for avoiding “unwarranted sentence disparities among defendants with similar records who have been found guilty of similar conduct.”
Prosecutors noted that the other men who previously pleaded guilty in the same scheme, father-and-son Peter Coker Sr. and Peter Coker Jr., received prison terms of six months and 40 months, respectively.
“A sentence more severe than his co-defendants’, particularly Coker, Sr.’s, would be unfair,” the U.S. Attorney’s Office said in the filing.
Peter Coker Sr. and his wife, Susan Coker, at N.J. District Court in Camden, N.J., Oct. 11, 2022
Source: Jerry Frasier and Vinny Castaldo
Both Cokers have since served their sentences for the scheme, which artificially boosted the stock price of two thinly traded companies to make them more attractive candidates for reverse mergers.
One of the companies, Hometown International, owned just one small, unprofitable deli in Paulsboro, New Jersey — Your Hometown Deli — which was run by Patten’s friend, a high school wrestling coach, who has not been accused of wrongdoing. Hometown’s market capitalization topped $100 million at one point.
The other company whose shares were manipulated in the scheme, E-Waste, had an even higher market cap at some point, despite being nothing more than a shell company.
Three pages of the 11-page sentencing submission filing by prosecutors are blacked out.
Those pages explain why prosecutors believe O’Hearn should grant the disgraced former stockbroker Patten a steep downward departure from advisory sentencing guidelines.
Sentencing submissions are not public in New Jersey federal court unless a request is made to make them public.
Court rules say that before a submission is made public, prosecutors and lawyers for the defendant shall confer to determine what “non-public information should be redacted.”
“Presumptively Non-Public Information includes” names of victims, witnesses, uncharged individuals and “information regarding cooperation by the defendant and others that was not previously disclosed,” the rules state.
It…
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