A 51-year-old man accused of surreptitiously filming women engaged in sex acts is trying to avoid jail time by taking his case directly to a top Manhattan criminal judge over the objection of the district attorneyโs office.
Daniel McAvoy, of Manhattan, was charged with 29 felony counts of unlawful surveillance in 2022 after investigators seized a trove of cameras and videos of women disrobing or engaging in sexual activity. That included more than 150 DVDs recovered from the Binghamton-area home of his father, longtime Senior U.S. District Judge Thomas McAvoy, Gothamist previously reported.
Court records now show McAvoyโs attorneys are trying to get their client accepted into a program that would allow him to avoid jail time if he pleads guilty and commits to completing an extensive treatment plan. Without it, a guilty conviction could come with a possible jail sentence of up to four years in state prison.
The prosecutor and judge overseeing McAvoyโs case both objected to his attorneysโ request in November. But McAvoyโs legal team has been undeterred, bringing their case directly to Ellen Biben, the administrative judge of the criminal part of state Supreme Court in Manhattan, in an attempt to convince her to bypass the prosecutor and trial judgeโs objections.
Biben worked with then-Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vanceโs office to launch the ATI court in 2019. The program is unique to Manhattan, and has been hailed as an innovative way to connect people to much-needed services โ rather than simply incarcerate them โ when they come into contact with the criminal justice system.
In most cases, however, a defendantsโ case is only moved to the Felony Alternative to Incarceration (ATI) Court, as the program is known, with the consent of the prosecution. In McAvoyโs case, thereโs an exception because his alleged crimes donโt carry a mandatory jail sentence.
โEven if the [prosecutor does] not consent to it, we can still make an application…
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