• The injury and loss of life claims from the 1912 sinking of the
Titanic, the 1915 torpedo attack on the
Lusitania and the 1904 fire aboard the
General Slocum were heard in the S.D.N.Y. • The 1949 perjury trial of
Alger Hiss was heard in the S.D.N.Y Court. • The 1951 espionage trial of
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg was heard in the S.D.N.Y. • Judge
John M. Woolsey of the S.D.N.Y. rejected government efforts to censor on obscenity grounds the distribution of
James Joyce's
Ulysses in 1933. • Judge
Murray Gurfein of the Court rejected government efforts to enjoin
The New York Times from publishing the
Pentagon Papers in 1971. •
Defamation suits were heard in the S.D.N.Y. against
CBS and
Time magazine by General
William Westmoreland and
Israeli General
Ariel Sharon. • Two former
Attorneys General of the United States were indicted and tried in the S.D.N.Y. for crimes while in office –
Harry Daugherty of the
Teapot Dome era and
John Mitchell of the
Watergate era. Juries were unable to reach verdicts in the two trials against Daugherty in 1926; John Mitchell was acquitted in 1974. •
Financial frauds have been prosecuted in the S.D.N.Y., among them the cases against
Bernard Madoff,
Ivan Boesky,
Michael Milken, and
Sam Bankman-Fried. • The 1990
trial of Imelda Marcos, who was the former
First Lady of the Philippines, and who was indicted on charges of
fraud,
racketeering, conspiracy, and
obstruction of justice. • Bombings: the trials of those accused of the
1998 United States embassy bombings in East Africa; those alleged to have been responsible for the
1993 World Trade Center bombing;
Omar Abdel Rahman (known in the press as "The Blind Sheikh"); and those who conspired to carry out the
Bojinka plot occurred in the District. More recently, the prosecution arising out of the
2010 Times Square car bombing attempt were each heard in the S.D.N.Y. •
Bridgeman v. Corel (1999) established that exact reproductions of public domain paintings were not subject to
copyright protection. •
Viacom Inc. v. YouTube Inc., a $1 billion lawsuit against Google and YouTube in 2012 on the grounds of alleged
copyright infringement. The
DMCA safe harbor law became the main argument in the case. • Prosecution of
Abduwali Muse, the so-called "Somali Pirate", was heard in the Court in 2010. • The criminal cases against
Bess Myerson,
Leona Helmsley and
Martha Stewart were heard in the S.D.N.Y. as well. • The
Deflategate controversy concerning the
National Football League's
Tom Brady was heard in the S.D.N.Y. in 2015. • In 2017,
Hosseinzadeh v. Klein, concerning the practice of
fair use in online video content, was heard in the S.D.N.Y. • On December 12, 2018, Judge
William H. Pauley III sentenced
Michael Cohen – who had served as personal legal counsel to U.S. president
Donald Trump for more than a decade – to "three years in prison and millions in forfeitures, restitution and fines", after pleading guilty to charges including campaign finance violations, tax evasion and committing perjury while under oath before Congress. •
Patrick Ho, former Hong Kong
Secretary for Home Affairs, bribery And money laundering offenses to
Sam Kutesa, former
Minister of Foreign Affairs in Uganda and
Idriss Déby, former
Chad President on behalf of
CEFC China Energy. • Criminal cases against rapper and record producer
Sean Combs, and
Ghislaine Maxwell, a sex trafficker and confidant of
Jeffrey Epstein. • The
E. Jean Carroll v. Donald J. Trump trial, presided over by Senior Judge
Lewis A. Kaplan, was held in April and May 2023 in which the jury reached a unanimous decision, after deliberating for less than three hours, that
Donald Trump was liable for
sexual abuse via forcible digital penetration and
defamation. Carroll was awarded a total of $5 million in damages. •
Luigi Mangione, suspect in the
killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, has a federal case that is being heard in the S.D.N.Y. == Current judges ==