Judge Lenard’s Cruel
and Bizarre Decision
against Rene
José Pertierra
•
ON Friday, September 16, a federal district court
judge made a bizarre ruling concerning one of the
Cuban Five defendants who completes his jail
sentence on October 7.
Judge
Joan Lenard ruled that René Gonzalez, who has
already served 13 years in a federal penitentiary
for being an unregistered agent of the Cuban
government, will be forced for the next three years
to live in Miami on what is called "supervised
release."
Mr. Gonzalez had asked the Court to
allow him to return home to Cuba to be with his wife,
Olga, and his two daughters, Ivette and Irma.
Several years ago, the Department of State decided
to permanently bar Olga from getting a visa to come
to the United States. She has been able to visit her
husband only once during the last 13 years. A cruel
and unusual punishment for any prisoner.
Although born in the United States,
Mr. González grew up in Cuba. He returned to this
country—at the behest of the Cuban government—to
monitor the activities of extremist groups in Miami
who were carrying out terrorist attacks against
Cuba’s civilian population from their safe havens in
southern Florida. But because he did not register
under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) and
inform the Department of Justice of his activities
here, he violated the law. The Miami-based
terrorists he was monitoring, conversely, have never
been prosecuted and remain free and protected in
Miami.
What possible interest would the
United States government have in further punishing a
person whose only crime is fighting terrorism? Why
force him to remain in Miami, a hotbed of anti-Cuba
terrorism, for the next three years? Doesn’t it
matter that Miami-based terrorists have murdered
3,478 Cubans and incapacitated 2,099 more during the
past five decades? Furthermore, how can Mr. González
be expected to comply with the terms of his
supervised release in Miami?
The court-imposed conditions include
prohibiting Mr. González "from associating with or
visiting specific places where individuals or groups
such as terrorists, members of organizations
advocating violence, organized crime figures are
known to be or frequent." Does this not mean rather
that he ought not to live in Miami, the sanctuary of
terrorism in the United States?
The terrorists that Mr. González was
tasked with monitoring continue to live in Miami.
They openly advocate violence. As recently as April
of this year, Luis Posada Carriles—the mastermind
both of the downing of a Cuban passenger plane that
killed all 73 persons aboard and of a campaign of
terror in Havana that targeted civilians in hotels
and restaurants —reaffirmed his support for further
violence against Cuba. Posada Carriles and his
terrorist friends live in Miami. Why is the Court
putting Mr. González’ safety at risk by forcing him
to live for the next three years side by side with
the very terrorists that he tailed as an
unregistered Cuban agent?
Cuban-American terrorists are
already responsible for the murders in the United
States of Orlando Letelier (ex-Foreign Minister of
Chile), Ronnie Karpen Moffitt (an American citizen),
Eulalio Negrín and Carlos Múñiz Varela (Cuban-Americans
who promoted dialogue with the government of Cuba),
as well as Felix García Rodríguez (a Cuban diplomat
at the UN).
A public opinion survey conducted on
the eve of the trial of the Cuba Five by legal
psychologist Dr. Kendra Brennan concluded that Cuban
Americans in Miami have "an attitude of a state of
war . . . against Cuba."
Moreover, a 29-page study published
a few years ago by Americas Watch said that "the
dominant intransigent forces in Miami’s Cuban exile
community" try to silence opposing viewpoints in
Miami with violence. For example, a radio station
was raided and one of its commentators beaten while
other advocates of policy changes were subjected to
bombings, vandalism of personal property and death
threats. "While in the last few years there have
been as many as a dozen bombings aimed at those who
favor a more moderate approach toward the Castro
regime, none has resulted in a single arrest or
prosecution," the report concluded.
It is irresponsible and dangerous
for the United States to force René González to
remain in this climate of violence and terrorism for
the next three years. His life is at risk.
Judge Lenard explained that she
cannot properly evaluate the "circumstances of the
offense and the history and characteristics of the
defendant."
Really, judge? The "circumstances of
the offense" are that René González came to the
United States not to spy on the U.S. government or
to commit any crimes. His job was to gather evidence
against terrorists who were operating with impunity
from the United States and whose targets were
innocent civilians in Cuba. In 1997, for example,
Cuban-American terrorists organized a series of
bombings at the most famous hotels and restaurants
in Havana, including Cuba’s emblematic hotel—the
Nacional—and the restaurant that Hemingway made
famous, the Bodeguita del Medio. The purpose of the
bombing campaign was to destroy Cuban tourism,
thereby striking another blow to the Cuban economy
which, at the time, was reeling from the loss of its
customary trading partners in Eastern Europe and the
Soviet Union.
Especially after 9-11, the United
States sustains that it is a matter of national
security to punish terrorists and reward those who
combat terrorism. If that is the case, then René
González should be allowed to return home to his
family—rather than force him to remain in Miami
surrounded by criminals who may very well have it in
for him.
Judge Lenard also claims in her
decision that, if she allows Mr. González to return
to Cuba on October 7, she will not be able to assess
whether the American public "will be protected from
further crimes of the defendant." His only "crime"
was failing to register as a foreign agent. How will
Mr. González endanger the American people if he
returns to Cuba? How much time does Judge Lenard
need to make to properly evaluate something as clear
as spring water?
The judge also alleges that more
time is needed to "provide the defendant with needed
educational or vocational training, medical care, or
other correctional treatment in the most effective
manner." What?!!!
René González has no intention of
living in the United States. His lawyer has already
said that his client is prepared to renounce his
American citizenship and return home to Cuba. He has
no need of educational or vocational training whose
purpose would be to reintegrate him into U.S.
society. He wants to go home to Cuba and be reunited
with his family, not be instructed on how to live in
this country and endure three more years of
estrangement from his family. As for medical care,
he will have access to the best medical care in Cuba
and it will be available at no expense to the United
States or to himself.
To no one’s surprise, the Assistant
United States Attorney in charge of the case,
Carolina Heck-Miller, opposed Mr. González’ request
to return to Cuba upon completion of his jail time.
This is, after all, the same federal prosecutor who
decided not to prosecute Luis Posada Carriles for
terrorism, despite a request from the lead attorney
on the case at the Department of Homeland Security.
The only saving grace in Judge
Lenard’s otherwise inexplicable decision is that she
gives Mr. González leave to re-file his Motion at a
later time, "should circumstances warrant
modification."
What circumstances could she be
waiting for? For a terrorist in Miami to take a
potshot at René? •