Konstantinos Diamantis’ attorney Norm Pattis has filed a motion seeking to withdraw from defending Diamantis in his second corruption trial, claiming the former high-ranking state employee has failed to pay Pattis for defending him the first time.
If U.S. District Court Judge Stefan Underhill grants the request, it could delay Diamantis’ second corruption trial, scheduled for early February.
Diamantis, the former Democratic deputy secretary of the Office of Policy and Management, is facing bribery, extortion and filing false statement charges for his alleged role in pressuring state employees to cancel a 2020 audit that was examining the Medicaid and Medicare billing of a Bristol optometry practice
In a separate case regarding school construction projects, Diamantis was convicted by a jury in late October on 21 counts of bribery, extortion, conspiracy and lying to federal investigators. He is facing between 10 and 12 years in prison on those charges, according to Pattis.
Sentencing on those charges has been postponed until after the second trial. Diamantis is currently free on $500,000 bail.
Pattis said in his motion that he will continue as Diamantis’ attorney for the sentencing from the first trial but that doing the second trial without getting paid “would be a hardship” for his firm.
“Mr. Diamantis has thus far not fulfilled his obligation as to services for that trial that has gone to verdict and has been warned that the undersigned will move to withdraw if the responsibility is not fulfilled,” Pattis wrote. “In the instant case, the undersigned contends it would be hardship to his firm to continue with representation to a second trial when the client’s obligations arising under the first trial have yet to be fulfilled.”
Underhill has not responded to Pattis’ motion as of Tuesday. It is unclear whether the judge would hold a hearing to question both Pattis and Diamantis about the fee dispute.
In his motion, Pattis said Diamantis would oppose the motion and said it was unclear if federal prosecutors would take a position. Diamantis said Tuesday he didn’t want to comment.
Jury selection for the second trial is supposed to begin Jan. 30, but if Pattis is allowed to withdraw, it could delay the trial while a new attorney familiarizes themselves with the case.
The indictment in the upcoming trial alleges that Diamantis conspired with Helen Zervas, owner of Family Eye Care, and Christopher Ziogas, a former Democratic state lawmaker and her fiancé, to get a potentially damaging audit canceled. In exchange, she allegedly paid Diamantis about $95,000.
Both Zervas and Ziogas have pleaded guilty, and Pattis has said he expects both of them to testify at the second trial.
Ziogas appeared in federal court last week and changed his plea to guilty before U.S. Magistrate Judge Robert M. Spector, who asked Ziogas to describe in his own words what he had done.
“I participated in a scheme with Helen and Kosta to try and have him suppress some activity in Medicaid charges that she was facing,” Ziogas said, adding, “We paid him to help influence the outcome of the audit.”
When asked by the judge what he had specifically done, Ziogas added, “Helen gave me money, and I gave it to Kosta — maybe $100,000.”
There is no mention in the 13-page plea agreement about whether Ziogas will be required to testify at Diamantis’ upcoming trial in the Zervas matter, and the issue was not brought up during last week’s hearing.
Ziogas is scheduled to be sentenced on Feb. 18. Under the plea agreement, he is facing between 70-87 months in prison. Ziogas was allowed to remain free on the $500,000 bail that has been in place since his arrest last February.
The case has its roots in a Medicaid audit that was scheduled in early 2020.
It was during the height of COVID, in May 2020, when Diamantis and Ziogas hand-delivered a check for nearly $600,000 to the Department of Social Services in order to reimburse the state Medicaid program for services that Zervas improperly billed.
After that check was delivered to the DSS office in Hartford, the audit into Zervas’ optometry practice was dropped, which prevented state auditors from combing through her records and potentially clawing back even more money for the state.
The CT Mirror reported that the audit of Bristol Eye Care was the only one that DSS canceled over a five-year period.
Diamantis and Ziogas previously told the CT Mirror that there was nothing illegal about the $600,000 payment, and they said their involvement had nothing to do with the agency ending the scheduled audit of Zervas’ practice.
Zervas pleaded guilty last February to health care fraud charges and admitted that she conspired with a former state lawmaker and former high-ranking Connecticut employee to pressure officials at the state’s Medicaid agency to cancel an audit that was examining Medicaid overpayments at her optometry practice.
The federal prosecutors said Zervas fraudulently billed the state’s Medicaid program on more than 300 occasions between 2015 and 2020. She did the same for Medicare patients, but less frequently.


