Is Minnesota businessman Tom Petters himself the victim of fraud?
Petters, awaiting trial on charges he ran a $3.5 billion Ponzi scheme, is now trying to get his case dismissed, claiming that during its investigation of him, the government hid the true identity of Larry Reynolds, an alleged co-conspirator who has pleaded guilty to money laundering in the case.
Attorneys for Petters apparently filed the motion earlier under seal, and refiled it Friday in U.S. District Court in St. Paul with the names blackened out. But the series of documents clearly appears to be about Reynolds, a key figure in the Petters investigation who was identified in earlier court filings as being in the U.S. Justice Department's witness security program.
The filing argues "information tends to show [name redacted] secretly led the scheme without Mr. Petters' knowledge."
Petters' attorneys argue that the government concealed the true identity of Larry Reynolds and his long criminal history during their investigation of Petters and that the secrecy violated Petters' Sixth Amendment right to a public trial. They're also seeking unspecified financial sanctions against the government for failing to disclose information considered vital to Petters' defense.
"The deep irony here is that the government helped supervise the fraud they have now indicted," Petters' attorneys Jon Hopeman and Paul Engh said in a 16-page affidavit supporting the motion.
Hopeman declined to discuss Petters' motion.
Frederic Bruno, the criminal defense attorney for Larry Reynolds, said he hadn't seen the filing and couldn't comment.