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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. By John F. Bailey. December 1, 2010:
Final summations began on the charges against the Mayor this morning in New York State Family Court, consisting of three charges of Assault in the Third Degree,and three “lesser included charges of Attempted Assault, Criminal Contempt, Tampering, 3 Harassments, and one Attempted Assault in the Third Degree (in connection with the tea-throwing incident alleged to have occurred on January 11.)
Luis Penichet, Bradley’s defense counsel, lead off the action, thanking the court and noting the judge had to find on all nine counts guilt on 5 levels of credibility “beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Referencing specific pages and reading lines from transcripts of prosecution witnesses’ testimonies Penichet showed how the prosecution witnesses’ direct testimony was contradicted by their answers to questions on cross-examination by Mr.Penichet.
Each set of inconsistencies (that Penichet read verbatim), Penichet said cast “reasonable doubt” on whether the incidents they spoke about actually happened in the manner Mrs. Bradley said they did.
He said Fumiko Bradley’s testimony was “classic reaonable doubt.” He said that his analysis of the transcript of Fumiko Bradley’s testimony said she answered “I don’t know,” or “I don’t remember” 62 times.
He totaled three such answers on direct testimony when being questioned by the prosecutor but said “I don’t remember” or “I don’t know,” 55 times during Penichet’s questioning.
Penichet took each witness the prosecution presented and deconstructed the elements of testimony he proposed created reasonable doubt. He pointed out it was significant that 5 of the six witnesses called did not witness the February 28 door incident, nor the January 11 tea throwing incident.
Photo Evidence Not Fair and Accurate
He noted that Detective Robbins could only testify 2 of the 11 evidence photograph printouts of Mrs. Bradley’s injury were “fair and accurate representations” of what he photographed.
Neighbor Testimony Revealed Self-Interest
He delivered line-by-line demonstrations on the testimony of Fumiko Bradley’s neighbor Alexandra Hofgaertner, noting Ms. Hofgaertner “only knew” of the tea incident and hand incident because Mrs. Bradley told her about them. He read Hofgaertner’s testimony where she admitted advising Mrs. Bradley “she needed a plan,” that “she needed to get rid of the au pair,”
He demonstrated through actual testimony that Hofgaertner had leaked e-mails Mrs. Bradley had sent to Ms. Hofgaertner to the press because she (Hofgaertner) was worried about her reputation and had accused Mrs. Bradley of “throwing her and John (her boyfriend) under the bus” by Mrs. Bradley’s attempt at reconciliation from March 5 through March 24. (The Hofgaertner exacerbation was revealed in a letter to the District Attorney’s office entered into evidence).
He pointedly noted Hofgaertner answering his question of why she (Hofgaertner) had not gone to the police over the years learning of Mr. Bradley’s alleged mistreatment of Fumiko Bradley over the years, saying “it wasn’t my place,” when she had heard from Fumiko about these alleged incidents of abuse for years.
Mother Not an Eyewitness
He recounted how Mrs. Bradley’s mother, Kane Machinaga was not a witness on the January 11 tea throwing incident, nor of the February 28 hand-in-the-door episode.
Penichet said: “Only Fumiko Bradley was the eyewitness (to the February 28 incident). It comes down to a matter of credibility, whether you believe Fumiko Bradley beyond a reasonable doubt. Her motive, her intent, her bias, her hostility. She wants to win (the divorce). She wants custody of her children…wants it (the divorce) to go her way.”
Character Witnesses Discounted
He dismissed the three character witnesses called in rebuttal to vouch for Mrs. Bradley’s character, observing that two of the witnesses had not had opinions of Mrs. Bradley’s credibility before the February 28 incident, and the third, who did, said the subject of Mrs. Bradley’s credibility never came up.
He chided the prosecution for not calling three witnesses present at the March 5 playdate to verify that Mr. Bradley was alleged, and did,confront Mrs. Bradley saying she should check herself into a mental institution as the prosecution contests.
Penichet highlighted that Fumiko Bradley’s mother did not come in response to Fumiko Bradley’s February 28 incident, but “as part of her regular springtime visit.” Penichet dryly observed, “I’m a parent, I’d be there on a rocket over here (from
Moment of Truth
“The moment of truth (in this case)” Penichet observed reading from Ms. Machinaga’s direct testimony about the events of April 2, that when she found her daughter crying in the bathroom that day, Fumiko Bradley told her mother, “He’s not wrong. I’m the one who’s wrong.”
Penichet elaborated for the judge, saying this was the day Mr. Bradley came to tell her on advice of his lawyers he could not see her any more, and Penichet said, “She’s (Fumiko) thinking, I’m the one who’s wrong. She’s the one who now thinks it’s (the marriage over.”
Tea Incident
On the Tea incident, Penichet punched away. He noted Mrs. Bradley’s descriptions on direct testimony about how she prepared the tea for Mr. Bradley in his favorite cup, asked by the prosecution why she did not report the alleged tea throw to the police and saying, “I didn’t want to hurt his career, and I think it’s my fault, too.”
Changing Testimony
Penichet accused Mrs. Bradley of changing her account of the February 28 incident after learning of Mr. Bradley’s defensive strategy in papers furnished her matrimonial lawyer.
Penichet alleged “somehow” those papers got to the district attorney’s office. “This is the first time in my career my whole defense was revealed to the prosecution before trial,” Penichet said.
Penichet alleged Mrs. Bradley realized that her original report to police of having had her hand slammed in the door once which she gave to the original investigators, was not possible if she was on the inside of the bedroom door because the door opens outward. He alleged she changed her story to say her hand had been slammed twice.
Penichet Wonders Why Tiihonen Testimony Not being Investigated.
Penichet referenced Amy Tiihonen’s testimony that Fumiko Bradley last September well after the February 28 incident said, “I lied to the police…I told them I get nervous and my Japanese kicks in, but I understood every word I read.”
Penichet said “I don’t know why there wasn’t an investigation (into that).”
Au Pair Lying for her employers a sign of credibility
He defended Yuko Watanabe, the au pair, as a credible witness (in describing the February 28 incident having Mr. Bradley never positioned downstairs, having started over a lemonade dispute, and a series of door slams during the incident) .
Penichet said Watanabe admitted that she was not truthful when Child Protective Services investigator Rodriguez asked her if she had ever seen violence between Mrs. Bradley and Mr. Bradley in the late afternoon of the February 28 alleged incident. Penichet explained this as being because she (Watanabe) said she did not want to get Mrs. Bradley or Mr. Bradley in trouble with the police.
Later in the morning, Prosecutor Amy Stone would dispute that as evidence of credibility, saying it went to the heart of Ms. Watanabe’s credibility as a witness. Penichet alluded to Yuko Watanabe’s state of mind where, in a private talk with Ms. Bradley just prior to the police arriving that Mrs. Bradley had told her “she’d been tricked by the police, and not to trust them.”
Two Epiphanies
Penichet wrapped up (after 1 hour and 15 minutes) with description of “two Epiphanies” in the case, in his opinion, both revolving around his interpretation that Mrs. Bradley got the impression that Bradley was going to divorce her.
The first “epiphany” occurred, he said, February 28 when Mrs. Bradley eavesdropped on Adam Bradley’s call to his then friend Peter Bodnar, saying he was “moving out,” after the confrontation with Mrs. Bradley in the bedroom door area. Hearing that, Penichet said Mrs. Bradley decided to make the charge she did. “I do not know what she did to her hand,” Penichet said.
The second “epiphany” occurred April 2, Penichet observed when Mr. Bradley said he could no longer see her on advice of his attorney. Penichet said this statement led her to believe Bradley was divorcing her, (resulting in another charge against him).
Penichet concluded saying the case made by the proscution is “incredible as a measure of law.”














