Federal judge cancels Adamiak’s resentencing hearing By: Lee Williams

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Adamiak’s family does not know what will happen next.

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Arenda L. Wright Allen, Senior United States District Judge, cancelled the June 25 hearing. (Photo courtesy U.S. Department of Justice).

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Retired ATF Senior Special Agent Daniel O’Kelly. (Photo courtesy International Firearm Specialist Academy.)

O’Kelly started with the ATF as a Special Agent in 1988. He was responsible for investigating arson, bombings, explosives, organized crime and drug trafficking, but the agency soon realized he was capable of far more. O’Kelly was certified as an expert firearm witness in federal court in 1990. Ten year later, he was chosen to serve as ATF’s Resident Agent in Charge of the State of Delaware. He has served as the firearm instructor coordinator of ATF’s Tampa Field Division. He became the chief firearm technology instructor at ATF’s National Academy, where he wrote the firearm technology course for ATF personnel, which is still in use.

Today, O’Kelly is director of the International Firearm Specialist Academy located in Grand Island, Florida. His clients include prosecutors and defense attorneys, law enforcement agencies, gun dealers and firearm manufacturers, importers and collectors.

O’Kelly was hired by the defense attorneys who first represented Adamiak, but federal prosecutors blocked O’Kelly from testifying on nearly every issue. However, Adamiak’s original defense attorneys were able to get him on the stand to stop ATF’s untruths involving MAC flats—flat pieces of metal that are designed to be bent in a jig or welded to form the lower receiver of a MAC-style pistol or carbine.

After lengthy testimony, the judge sided with O’Kelly, and denied the prosecutors’ attempt to penalize Adamiak for the 977 flat pieces of metal prosecutors claimed were machineguns. The additional 10 years prosecutors wanted for the flats were not added to Adamiak’s 20-year sentence, thanks to O’Kelly.

Adamiak’s new defense team chose O’Kelly as an expert witness for the hearing that was just cancelled.

He remains completely sure of Adamiak’s innocence.

“There is nothing in the evidence I’ve examined that qualifies as a violation of the Gun Control Act or the National Firearms Act,” O’Kelly said Sunday afternoon.

I asked O’Kelly if Adamiak was an innocent man behind bars.

“Yes. I’ve seen no evidence of any violation of any gun laws. Given my 23 years of experience, in this case I don’t see any proof of a violation,” he said.

O’Kelly holds ATF Firearm Enforcement Officer Jeffrey Bodell responsible for Adamiak’s undeserved prison sentence.

“Bodell did great damage to Adamiak’s case either by intentionally misleading the courtroom or by incompetence, whatever the case is,” O’Kelly said. “As a result, he has cost the man three years of his life.”

Takeaways

Adamiak’s defense attorney, Calum Welch, wanted the ATF to answer longstanding questions about this case.

“We’re disappointed and would have liked the opportunity to address some of the underlying determinations at this resentencing, especially following some of the regulatory changes and recent Supreme Court decisions. Vanderstock does raise some context in how to re-estimate ATF’s authority. Some of the recent rule changes also merit further examination,” Welch said.

He added that the ATF’s own interpretations when applied to the items that Adamiak possessed were not consistent with their own regulations.

“We will now focus on getting Tate back home where he belongs,” Welch said.

The cancellation of the hearing hit Adamiak’s family hard, especially his father, Dave.

“We’re basically in limbo and Tate’s in purgatory,” Adamiak’s father said. “We don’t know what’s going on.”

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