Michael Avenatti gets mistrial in California embezzlement case

Reuters

Published Aug 24, 2021 03:08PM ET

Updated Aug 24, 2021 04:20PM ET

By Jan Wolfe and Jonathan Stempel

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A federal judge on Tuesday declared a mistrial in the government's embezzlement case against Michael Avenatti, giving the already convicted celebrity lawyer a temporary reprieve as he defends against a slew of criminal charges.

U.S. District Judge James Selna in Santa Ana, California,said Avenatti was entitled to a new trial because prosecutors had failed to turn over relevant billing-related evidence. Avenatti, 50, who is representing himself, had argued that the evidence might be exculpatory, and that the failure to turn it over undermined his ability to mount a defense.

The mistrial was confirmed in an email from the office of Acting U.S. Attorney Tracy Wilkison in Los Angeles.

Selna found no evidence of intentional misconduct by prosecutors, according to The Recorder and Law360.

He set a tentative Oct. 12 date for another trial, but Avenatti may argue he cannot be retried because of double jeopardy. The trial had lasted one month.

"Today is a good day for every person who believes that the Constitution means something," Avenatti said in a statement provided by his standby lawyer Dean Steward. "Laws and rules matter."

Avenatti was being tried on 10 wire fraud charges for allegedly embezzling nearly $10 million of settlement proceeds from five clients.

He faces 26 additional charges in California, including bankruptcy, bank and tax fraud.

Avenatti shot from obscurity to fame in 2018 representing porn actress Stormy Daniels in lawsuits against then-U.S. President Donald Trump, becoming a cable news fixture and flirting with his own White House run.