Mistrial
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Judge rules mistrial in Michael Avenatti's California fraud case
Prosecutors reportedly failed to provide Avenatti with pertinent financial documents
Stephanie PagonesPublished 2 hours ago
A federal court judge overseeing the California fraud case against disgraced attorney Michael Avenatti has declared a mistrial, according to reports.U.S. District Court Judge James Selna handed down the decision on Tuesday, ruling that the government failed to provide Avenatti with certain financial documents, Law.com’s Meghann Cuniff reported.
"I think the defendant was entitled to have that data," Selna reportedly said. According to Cuniff, the jurist later added: "I find that prejudice occurred here in a number of ways."
Avenatti was representing himself at a federal criminal trial in Los Angeles, where he is charged with cheating several clients out of nearly $10 million. He argued that the documents were material to his defense that he did not bilk his clients out of millions of dollars in settlement proceeds, according to the Law.com report.
"This has been an incredibly difficult journey for my family, for my children for my friends and lastly, for me. I am extremely thankful to Mr. Steward, Ms. Cummings Cefali and our entire team for standing by me and advocating tirelessly on my behalf," Avenatti reportedly said after the decision was handed down.
According to the report, Selna set Oct. 12 as the retrial date.