Philip Horowitz, René
González’ lawyer: "Prison was bad but supervised
liberty is insulting"
CUBAN
anti-terrorist Rene González Sehwerert has completed
four months of his supervised liberty on February 7.
That day we talked with his lawyer Philip Horowitz
for close to half an hour.
During the interview, Horowitz
confirmed that he has spent the last four months
working on a new motion. René had already presented
one before Judge Joan Lenard prior to his release,
which she rejected on the basis that it was
premature. The aim is to present the judge with
evidence of René’s excellent behavior during his
probationary period thus far so that he can return
to Cuba permanently in the near future.
Clearly, Horowitz could not define
the date of this near future. He described the
situation as being like a baseball game, "You never
know how long it will last, you play each inning but
there is no set time for its end. The motion will be
submitted shortly, but once the judge has it, there
is no timeline for her decision. It depends on when
she reviews it, then the government has to respond,
then we do and it finally depends on the judge’s
decision.
Asked about the cruelty of the delay
in such a simple step in the case of a man 55 years
of age, who has already completed a long and unjust
sentence, the lawyer commented:
"The 13 years in prison were really
bad but the four months separated from his wife,
daughters, family, parents and his homeland are
insulting."
Horowitz is confident that the court
will not ignore the fact that, while he has U.S.
citizenship, René is a Cuban citizen and is having
to endure an enforced separation from his family.
The new motion is not based solely
on these aspects and René’s good behavior. Fears for
the Cuban hero’s personal safety, given that he is
forced to reside in an area where the terrorist
groups that the Five were monitoring move about
freely, remains a fundamental argument.
According to Horowitz there is a lot
of fear for René’s safety when a person in a high-ranking
position in the U.S. House of Representatives –
Ileana Ross Lethinen, who accused René of serious
charges on her official website, falsely declares
that he has American blood on his hands. This is
designed to turn public opinion against René by
suggesting that he is some kind of murderer, but the
only blood he has had on his hands is that of
someone who cuts himself while shaving. "These lies
affect René’s security and this is the number one
issue we are battling with," the lawyer noted.
FOR HIS PERSONAL SAFETY I CANNOT SAY
WHERE RENE IS LIVING
At one point in the conversation,
which also covered the Habeas Corpus situation of
the Five, details of René’s supervised liberty, his
health and the impossibility of his having access to
medical insurance; as well as other cruel and absurd
restrictions like those preventing him seeing his
wife or brother Roberto, who made an extremely
valuable contribution to the defense team and cannot
travel to see him due to serious health problems,
Horowitz surprised us with an unexpected comment:
"One of the questions you haven’t
asked, and a very common one that I am asked all the
time in the United States, is where René is living.
I would never state that. And not because I don’t
have confidence in you, I trust everyone in this
room and I would entrust that information to
everyone living in Cuba, but for René’s safety I
cannot make this information public."
It was a question we would never ask
him but this was the response with which he chose to
give at the end of the conversation. With it, Philip
Horowitz, René González Sehwerert’s lawyer,
expressed in many ways the absurdity of the Cuban
hero’s permanence in the United States since he was
released from prison four months ago.
Horowitz’s comments retranslated
from the Spanish
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