Craig Carton |
“We do not know,” defense lawyer Robert Gottlieb told U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon. “We’re having serious conversations.”
According to Newsday, the end of the government’s case came unexpectedly early, at the start of the second week of Carton’s trial on charges he made false statements to lure investors to put more than $4 million in his ticket re-sale business, and then diverted the money.
Prosecutors say that after promising his funders — ranging from a hedge fund to a wealthy Brooklyn pharmacist — that their money would be used to invest in event tickets that could be re-sold at a profit, Carton used the funds to pay off gambling debts and pay back earlier investors.
Boomer & Carton |
Carton’s defense is that he was a victim of an alleged co-conspirator — Joseph Meli, who is in prison now for a separate ticket-related Ponzi scheme — and that he never intended to defraud or harm any of his investors.
On Monday, Gottlieb asked McMahon to dismiss the charges on that theory. “It is our position that the government has presented evidence if believed that shows misrepresentation and… may rise to the level of deceit,” he said. “…That is insufficient.”
“You’re wrong,” the judge said.
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