Call to action
following court decision to further punish René
González
•
WASHINGTON.— The International Committee for the
Freedom of the Cuban 5 imprisoned in the U.S. has
called for an international mobilization denouncing
the continuing punishment of René González, one of
the Five.
In a communiqué released September
19, the group warned that the U.S. government now
intends to prevent González from immediately
returning to Cuba to be reunited with his family,
when he is completes his sentence October 7.
René deserves this right, the text
emphasizes, after serving "down to the last minute
his unjust sentence, having never benefited from a
re-sentencing." In December of 2001, a Miami judge
sentenced him to 15 years in prison, which he has
served in the Marianna, Florida federal facility.
The Committee called upon solidarity
activists to denounce this new punishment and called
for "a mobilization of public opinion worldwide" to
support René's right to rejoin his family in Cuba
upon his release from prison.
González was given three years of
probation, or supervised liberty, because he was
born in the United States.
The group recalled that "seven
months ago, René's lawyer submitted a motion to
modify the terms of his probation and allow him, for
humanitarian reasons, to return to Cuba once his
sentence was served and be reunited with his wife
and family."
Subsequently, on March 25, federal
prosecutor Caroline Heck Miller requested that the
judge deny this motion and, on September 16, Judge
Joan Lenard did so, alleging that the Miami court
needed time to evaluate René's behavior once he was
freed.
She further asserted that the court
must "verify that he does not pose any danger to the
United States," according to the Committee's
statement entitled "Act now: against more punishment
for René González."
The Committee recalled that Heck
Miller is the same federal prosecutor who declined
to file criminal charges against Luis Posada
Carriles and that Joan Lenard is the same judge who,
when initially sentencing the Five, included special
provisions for René upon his release.
These state that he is "prohibited
from associating with or visiting specific places
where individuals or groups such as terrorists,
members of organizations advocating violence or
organized crime figures are known to frequent."
The Committee's communiqué reads, "Thus
it is established… the shameless acknowledgement of
the impunity afforded terrorists in Miami, the
explicit prohibition that they should not be
bothered and that those, like René and his four
brothers, who dare to do so will be punished.
Forcing René to submit to three
years of probation in Florida, "a den of
international terrorists… poses a serious threat to
his physical safety and his life," the Committee
emphasized. (PL) •