Minnesota businessman Tom Petters, accused of running one of the largest Ponzi schemes in history, will get his day in court June 9, a federal judge ruled Thursday.
And at the same time, attorneys representing Petters announced that they want to revisit the order that has kept Petters in jail for the past three months and seek his release so that he can more effectively help with his defense.
"His life is in the balance here," said defense attorney Paul Engh, noting that Petters could face life in prison if convicted.
Engh, a Minneapolis attorney who this week joined Jon Hopeman on the Petters defense team, asked for a December trial date, citing the complexity of the case and a lack of access to evidence that was seized by the government.
"The temptation here is to rush this along," Engh told U.S. District Judge Richard Kyle. "But we need more time. There hasn't ever been a case like this in Minnesota. The discovery is just massive here."
Petters, 51, of Wayzata, faces 20 felony charges -- including conspiracy, mail and wire fraud and money laundering -- related to allegations that he orchestrated a scheme that bilked more than $3.5 billion from investors since the mid-1990s. Until New York trader Bernard Madoff's arrest last month on suspicion of running a $50 billion Ponzi scheme, the case against Petters appeared to be the largest in history.
A straightforward case
Even so, Assistant U.S. Attorney John Marti called the Petters matter a straightforward fraud case, and suggested an April trial date.