Showing posts with label Gerardo Hernández. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gerardo Hernández. Show all posts

Friday, August 31, 2012

The Habeas Corpus of Gerardo Hernandez

August 23, 2012 | Havanna Times


The photos of the five Cuban agents are part of the island’s landscape. Photo: Raquel Perez

HAVANA TIMES — UN Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers, Gabriela Knaul, officially expressed her concern over the lack of transparency and the legal procedures employed in the trials of five Cuban agents arrested in the US over a decade ago.

Apparently the prosecution and the judge played with cards up their sleeves by preventing the defense from having “access to all available evidence and documentary archives.” This was a violation of procedures so elementary that it even appears in TV series.

But the procedural mistakes don’t stop there. According to the UN rapporteur, the habeas corpus writ presented by the defense is being reviewed “by the same judge who was previously in charge of the case,” thereby making her the judge and the jury.

To top it all off, the hand of the US government can be seen in its pressuring of the courts for tougher sentences. Before and during the trial, several journalists in Miami received money to write articles against the five Cuban agents.

It really doesn’t seem legal for the executive branch to exert influence over the judiciary, nor is it very ethical for a journalist to agree to receive money from the government in exchange for writing articles to influence the outcome of an ongoing trial.

US attorney Martin Garbus says that between 1998-2001 an arsenal of propaganda was received by the Miami community through print, radio and television — paid for by the government — to interfere with the trail and to persuade the jury.

According to Garbus, fifteen journalists received money to write against the five agents. Apparently some received their funds secretly, with not even their media outlets knowing that they were working for another more generous employer. For this, one of the reporters was paid $175,000 USD.

The Office of Cuba Broadcasting (OCB) of the US government was forced to admit to the accusation when reporter Oscar Corral revealed that 50 of his colleagues in Florida were paid by government-funded Radio Marti for articles supporting the position of the US Department of State against Cuba.

The scandal was such that Jesus Diaz, the editor of the largest newspaper in Miami, fired several journalists claiming that the press can’t “ensure objectivity and integrity if any of our reporters receive monetary compensation from any entity, especially a government agency.”
Gerardo Hernandez
The head of the Cuban agents, Gerardo Hernandez, was sentenced to two life sentences. Photo: Taken from Cubadebate

Despite the harsh words of the editor, this lack of ethics and professionalism seem not to have been considered too serious because a few months later several of those journalists returned to their old jobs, writing as if nothing had ever happened.

Certainly, there have been so many legal and ethical anomalies that make it seem logical for UN Rapporteur Gabriela Knaul to look askance at the independence of the judges in this case. Just the same, one would have expected such occurrences given the place where the trial was held.

Miami is a city where Cuban exiles have enormous political, economic and media power. It was highly unlikely to obtain a fair verdict in relation to these five agents who confessed to monitoring and reporting to Cuba on the activities of [terrorist figures] within that same community.

The atmosphere in Miami surpasses even their hatred of Fidel Castro and extends to citizens who live on the island. In the largest newspaper in the city diatribes appear ensuring that any relaxation of tensions “will have to be built by the submissive Cubans living on the island.”

The island’s residents are described as “those who have endured everything, who collaborated with everything, who have beaten Cuban dissidents, those who have betrayed their compatriots, who have tortured them, who have thrown them into the sea, and who have spent fifty years filling Fidel’s Revolution Square applauding and sniffing his ass.”

But it seems that the natural environment of that city wasn’t enough for Washington, so they decided that their official information apparatus would “burn up” hundreds of thousands of dollars to further inflame the situation and create a bonfire through the press.

In such an environment, Gerardo Hernandez was sentenced to two life sentences, ensuring that he would remain behind bars even if reincarnated in another life. Now his defense is demanding a fair trial in an unbiased city and without pressure from governmental or media campaigns.

The issue is worrisome even to the United Nations, because — as American lawyer Martin Garbus has expressed — “every dollar for every article, photo or radio or television program that was spent on this secret program violated the integrity of the trial.”
—–
(*) An authorized translation by Havana Times (from the Spanish original) published by BBC Mundo.

Defense Team for Gerardo Hernandez Files Appeal in U.S. Court

 Aug. 20, 2012 cadenagramonte.cu

Miami, August 20.- The defense team for Gerardo Hernandez, one of the five Cuban anti-terrorists sentenced to long prison terms in the United States, filed an appeal today in Miami to overturn his conviction.

Attorney Martin Garbus introduced the 82-page affidavit in the U.S. District Court in Miami, to support the habeas corpus appeal for Gerardo and the reversal of his conviction, citing misconduct by the U.S. Government during the trial.

Gerardo, sentenced to double life plus 15 years, was detained in September 1998 along with Rene Gonzalez, Ramon Labañino, Antonio Guerrero and Fernando Gonzalez, for monitoring violent groups in Miami that were organizing and carrying out actions against the island.

Through the affidavit, the defense team asks the court, on behalf of Gerardo, to order discovery from Washington of evidence that reveals payments to journalists to create a hostile atmosphere and influence the jury for a conviction.(Taken from Radio Havana Cuba)

Friday, July 13, 2012

U.S. Blocks Consular and Legal Visits of Gerardo Hernandez Nordelo

by ICFC5

This page is also available in: Spanish

Once again an additional punishment has been inflicted upon Gerardo Hernandez Nordelo, one of the Cuban 5 anti-terrorist fighters unjustly imprisoned in the United States for almost 14 years. On Saturday July 7 Cuban consuls  were not allowed to enter the prison  and on Monday July 9 his lawyer, Martin Garbus, was also denied a legal visit  having to resort instead to enter as a regular visitor. This meant that Garbus could not enter the prison with any legal documents for Gerardo’s current appeal or any pens or writing paper.

The International Committee for the Freedom of the Cuban 5 denounces this new arbitrary measure against Gerardo. It seems that it is not enough for the US government to keep 4 innocent men in prison and another under a punitive supervised probation, now they add more impediments to elementary legal and human rights.

We also demand the US government  grant immediate visa to Adriana Perez to visit Gerardo in prison and to allow Rene Gonzalez to immediately return home to his loved ones.

Statement by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Cuba 

One of the five antiterrorist fighters unjustly imprisoned in the United States, Hero of the Republic of Cuba, Gerardo Hernández Nordelo, has been subject  of a new arbitrariness by the authorities of that country, aiming at hindering his legal process.

Last Saturday, July 7th, the Cuban officers who had been already authorized by the State Department to carry out a consular visit to Gerardo, were not able to fulfill it, under the supposed argument that the memorandum of the Chief of the penitentiary center Victorville, in California, authorizing their entrance to the prison, was not available at the reception desk. This fact powerfully calls the attention  when, in addition to the procedures followed by the Cuban Interests Section in Washington with the State Department to get the authorization for this visit, Gerardo himself had reconfirmed with the prison´s authorities that everything was in order.

Additionally, last July 9th, lawyer Martin Garbus, member of Gerardo´s defense team, who had scheduled a legal visit to review, together with Gerardo, the documentation related to the current collateral process of appeal, was not able to do it with the same pretext that the memorandum of authorization of the chief of prison was not at the reception desk. Garbus could finally visit Gerardo, thanks to the fact that his name was on the visitor´s list; however, and given the conditions imposed to the type of visit he was authorized to, without a legal character, he could not bring in the documentation our Hero should read and sign, and neither met with him under the appropriate conditions.

This is not the first time events like this one occur. They have taken place systematically during every key moment of Gerardo´s legal process. Just to mention a few examples: in 2010, during the preparations of the collateral appeal, known as Habeas Corpus, the penitentiary authorities denied Gerardo the possibility to be visited by his lawyer Leonard Weinglass in two occasions, and deliberately delayed the delivery of his legal mail, which prevented his participation in the reviewing. In 2003, Gerardo was isolated in a punishment cell prior to the presentations of his direct appeal.

The Minister of Foreign Affairs denounces this new maneuver by US authorities, aiming at hindering Gerardo´s process of appeal, depriving him from one of the few rights he has as a prisoner in the United States.

Gerardo has been sent to solitary confinement several times without justification; he´s had repeated difficulties with his personal and legal mail; his wife, Adriana, has not been granted visa to visit him and they have not been able to conceive a child. During his long and unjust imprisonment, on charges for crimes he did not commit and have never been proved, his rights have been violated repeatedly.

Cuba will not stop denouncing to the world these violations and will not cease the efforts to achieve the return to the Homeland of Gerardo and his other four brothers unjustly imprisoned and retained in the United States for almost 14 years.

Havana July 12th, 2012

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

United States Rejects Petition of Anti-terrorist Gerardo Hernandez

Monday, 09 July 2012 cadenagramonte.cu

Havana, July 9.- The Attorney General’s Office of the US state of Florida expressed the Miami court its rejection of the request issued by lawyer Martin Garbus, on behalf of Cuban antiterrorist Gerardo Hernandez, of an oral hearing and access to additional information that allowed a deeper probe into the case of “journalists”, who were paid to act before and during the trial against the five Cuban antiterrorists in order to create what was described in 2005 by the Appeals Court as a perfect storms of prejudices and hostility.

In an evidently evasive maneuver, the US government tries to argue that the facts presented by the defense do not exist and that it is not necessary to look for more information in order to clarify them, according to the Antiterroristas.cu) website.alt

The government told Judge Joan Lenard that the denunciation by the defense about the behavior of the “journalists”, who Lenard herself admitted to have threatened and harassed the jury, is but conspiracy and generalized speculation.

The Attorney General’s Office warned that it could resort to “executive privileges” and to the Classified Information Protection Law to reject the petition, which is the same as admitting its intention to keep hiding and manipulating the proofs.

The government office also rejected the oral hearing requested by Gerardo Hernandez.

Gerardo Hernandez, along Rene Gonzalez, Antonio Guerrero, Fernando Gonzalez, and Ramon Labanino, were given unfair and extremely long sentences on charges that were not proven, after they monitored Florida-based ultra-right organizations that have undertaken terrorist actions against Cuba over the past five decades. (Taken from Radio Habana Cuba)

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Gerardo Hernandez - The View From Victorville Prison

Weekend Edition June 8-10, 2012 Counterpunch

by DANNY GLOVER and SAUL LANDAU

We visited Gerardo Hernandez for the fifth time and, as usual, his spirits seemed higher than ours despite the fact that he resides in a maximum-security federal prison.

Gerardo and three other Cuban intelligence agents approach their 14th year of incarceration – each in different federal penitentiaries. Rene Gonzalez, the fifth Member of the Cuban Five, got paroled after serving thirteen years, but not allowed to leave south Florida without permission for another 2½ years.

The uniform, given to Gerardo earlier in the day, looks three sizes too large. But the ill-fitting tan jumpsuit doesn’t affect Gerardo’s smile or the warm embrace of his hug when he greets us.

He had watched some of the recent CNN “Situation Room” shows in which Wolf Blitzer interviewed a variety of actors – Secretary of State Hilary Clinton, Victoria Nuland (Press agent at State), Alan Gross (convicted of anti-regime activities in Cuba) and Josefina Vidal (US desk chief in Cuban Foreign Ministry). They presented views on the justice or injustice surrounding the cases of Gross and the 5.

Cuba sent the 5 to south Florida in the 1990s to stop terrorism in Cuba because that’s where the planning for bombings of hotels, bars and clubs took place, he explained. In 2009, “Gross came to Cuba as part of a US plan to push for “regime change,” Gerardo asserted.

Gross sounded desperate when he talked to Wolf Blitzer on CNN’s Situation Room. He described his confinement in a military hospital: “It’s just like a prison, with bars on the windows.” Did he forget he received a fifteen-year sentence?

For Gerardo, bars, barbed wire, electronically operated, heavy metal doors, and guards watching and periodically screaming commands describe routine daily life in the Victorville Federal Prison.

Gerardo eats a pink slime sandwich, which we bought at the visiting room’s vending machines and popped into the microwave. We munch on junk food – all bought from the same sadistic apparatus offering various choices of poisons.

Other prisoners, mostly sentenced for drug dealing, sit with wives or women companions and kids under the watchful eyes of three guards seated above on a platform. The uniformed men chuckle and exchange prison gossip; we talk about Gerardo’s case.

The Miami federal judge condemned him to two consecutive life sentences plus fifteen years for conspiracy to commit murder and conspiracy to commit espionage must get to him. Gerardo became a victim of the strange notion of US justice in Miami where the US prosecutor presented not a shred of evidence to suggest Gerardo Hernandez knew about Havana’s plan to shoot down two planes flying over Cuban air space (“murder”); nor that he had any control over, or role in what happened on February 24, 1996 when two Cuban MIG fighters rocketed two Brothers to the Rescue planes and killed both pilots and co-pilots – just as Cuban had warned the US government it would do if the illegal over-flights continued.

Indeed the evidence paints a very different picture of what Gerardo Hernandez really knew. Cuban State Security would hardly inform a mid level agent of a decision made by Cuban leaders to shoot down intruding aircraft after he had delivered a series of warnings to Washington.

In fact, as a new Stephen Kimber book shows, “the back-and-forth memos between Havana and its field officers in the lead-up to the MIG jets firing rockets at the Brothers’ planes make it clear everything was on a need-to-know basis—and Gerardo Hernandez didn’t need to know what the Cuban military was considering.” (Shootdown: The Real Story of Brothers to the Rescue and the Cuban Five. Available as an ebook)

Gerardo, like the Cuban government, insists the Brothers’ planes got shot down over Cuban airspace, not in international waters as Washington claims. But the National Security Agency, which had satellite images of the fatal event, has refused to release them.

The Brothers’ planes had over flown Cuban airspace for more than half a year (1995-6) before they got blown out of the sky. Cuba had alerted the White House several times, and a National Security Counsel official had written the Federal Aviation Authority to strip the Brothers’ pilot licenses – to no avail.

The Cuban intelligence agents that had infiltrated Brothers to the Rescue had informed Havana that Jose Basulto, the Brothers’ chief, had successfully test fired air-to-ground weapons he might use against Cuba. For Cuba, the Brothers had become a security threat.

The NSA documents, however, never arrived at the trial, nor did Gerardo’s lawyers get them for the appeals.

Gerardo’s case for exoneration for conspiracy to murder rests on establishing one simple fact: if the shoot downs occurred over Cuban airspace no crime was committed.

On conspiracy to commit espionage, the government relied on Gerardo’s admission that he was a Cuban intelligence agent rather than seek evidence to show he tried to get secret government documents or any classified material. Gerardo’s job was to prevent terrorist strikes against Cuba by exiled Cubans in Miami, not penetration of secret US government agencies.

Justice in the autonomous Republic of Miami led five anti-terrorists to prison. Gerardo smiles, perhaps his way of telling us he remains convinced he did the right thing, meaning he has stayed true to his convictions. We wonder if we could endure fourteen years of maximum-security confinement.

DANNY GLOVER is an activist and an actor.

SAUL LANDAU’S ”WILL THE REAL TERRORIST PLEASE STAND UP” screens at San Francisco’s Brava Theater (24th & York) on June 8, 7:30.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Glover and Landau Visit Gerardo Hernandez, Compare Gross Case With Cuban 5

Dec. 22, 2011 By Saul Landau ZNet

2:30 PM, departure time the most excruciating part of visiting Gerardo Hernandez. A prison guard announced: “Visiting hours are over.” Gerardo lined up against the wall with the other inmates. We stood with wives, children and mothers. Finally, the electronically controlled, heavy metal door opened. Gerardo held up a triumphant fist. We did the same. He stayed in Hell (13 years now). We left.

We drove from the Victorville Penitentiary to the Ontario California airport, discussing the absurdity of five Cubans (one on precarious parole) who helped the United States fight terrorism but remain locked in federal penitentiaries while Luis Posada Carriles who orchestrated the 1976 bombing of a Cuban passenger plane (73 died) dines in Miami’s finest restaurants? In between visits to his proctologist Posada and fellow geezers continue plotting anti-Cuba violence.

Miami Federal Court judges will decide on Gerardo’s appeal, which presents new facts and evidence: Gerardo’s trial lawyer now admits he inadequately represented him; new documents show payment by the US government to Miami-based “journalists” who offered negative stories about the accused Cubans, thus tainting the trial atmosphere. Finally, the US government has still refused to deliver its “secret” map showing the exact point where on February 24, 1996 Cuban MIGs shot down two Brothers to the Rescue airplanes. The Cubans claim the incidents occurred over Cuban airspace, i.e.; no crime took place. Washington insisted the planes got hit in international air space, but the NSA said they could not release their crucial diagram: “national security.” Gerardo played no part in the drama -- no matter where the shoot down occurred.

We agreed US Cuba policy bordered on the absurd. For example, the State Department placed Cuba on its terrorist list although the US has made Cuba a victim of terrorist attacks; Cuba has not reciprocated. But Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee argued: "the United States should not negotiate with a state sponsor of terrorism."

This related to her objection to any US humanitarian approach to get Alan Gross released. Convicted in Cuba for activities related to a USAID regime change policy, Gross must either serve his fifteen year sentence or wait until the US military “liberates” the island. She called on people to assassinate Fidel Castro (see Landau’s WILL THE REAL TERRORIST PLEASE STAND UP).

This rhetoric hardly serves Gross’ interests. Thanks to Ileana he might stay in prison until age 75. He misses his family, as do the Cubans in US prisons. Like Alan, they also have close relatives with serious illnesses. When my mother died in 2009 “I wasn’t in Cuba to bury her.”

Gerardo told us he and Adriana, now 42 want children. So does another member of the five, Fernando Gonzalez and his wife. The US denies visas to their wives. Time is running out. Gerardo’s face showed a flash of anguish.

The Five’s cause gets little publicity. Not so the case of Alan Gross, an American contractor sentenced to 15 years in Cuba for activities designed to undermine Cuba’s government. The Gross and Cuban Five cases, however, are different. Gerardo received two consecutive life sentences plus fifteen years for conspiring to commit espionage and aiding and abetting murder -- supposedly providing information to Cuban authorities, which was public, on the February 24, 1996 fatal flights of the Brothers to the Rescue. Since the trial took place in Miami, the prosecution didn’t need to provide evidence for either charge. Imagine five Jews on trial in Berlin in 1938!

Gross, perhaps misunderstood the nature of his mission, to teach clandestinely dissidents to operate closed satellite networks to help overthrow the Cuban government. The Five came to Florida to stop terrorism, not destabilize the US government,” said Gerardo.

True, Gerardo explained, Gross and the Cubans are prisoners and want to go home. But, he said, “the media reports regularly on the Jewish-American imprisoned in Havana for allegedly trying to help the Jewish community obtain internet technology. Cuban Jewish leaders deny Gross came to help them. Synagogues in Cuba had access to the Internet well before Gross’ visit,” he clarifed.

Nor, Gerardo smiled did “we [the Cuban Five] enter the US with tourists visas as Gross did.” In his visits to Cuba, “Gross never told his Cuban contacts he worked on a government contract. US policy says it wants regime change. Imagine Cuba sending in agents to overthrow capitalism and install a socialist government. Wow! Free health care for all -- just because all human beings deserve it.”

Gerardo sympathized with Gross health problems. Alan gets special medical attention and doesn’t cohabit with convicted criminals. The Cuban 5 often did not receive needed medical attention in US prisons. Cuba has allowed Judy Gross to visit her husband.

Recently, groups of Jews picketed the Cuban Interest Section in Washington. Their signs “Cuban Gross Injustice” don’t indicate recognition of the Cuban Five. They, like the US government, demand that Cuba free Gross. They don’t demand reciprocity from Obama: free the Cubans who have already served 13 years.

Obama could make a humanitarian gesture to free the Cuban Five. Cuba has already “conveyed to the U.S. government its willingness to find a humanitarian solution to the Gross case on reciprocal basis.” (Cuban government press release December 2011)

The US media ignores the statements of 10 Nobel Prize winners, Amnesty International and the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detentions. All agree. The Cuban Five did not get a fair trial and merit a pardon or a new trial – not in Miami.

Obama knows how to get Alan Gross home. After all, Israel swapped 1000 Palestinian prisoners for one captured Israeli.

Landau is an Institute for Policy Studies fellow. His WILL THE REAL TERRORIST PLEASE STAND UP (with Danny Glover) is on dvd (cinemalibrestore.com. COUNTERPUNCH published his BUSH AND BOTOX WORLD.

Glover is an activist and actor.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

In Memory of Leonard Weinglass

Len y Gerardo

Not that long ago Len came to visit me and we
worked for several hours preparing for the next
step of my appeal. I noticed at the time that he
was tired. I was worried with his advanced age
that he was driving alone after a long trip from
New York. The weather was bad and the roads from
the airport up to Victorville wind through the
mountains surrounding the high desert. I
mentioned my concern to him but he did not pay it
any attention. That was the way he was, nothing stopped him.

When we would meet the same thing would always
happen. At some point in our conversation, while
listening to him talk, my mind would separate
from his words and I would focus on the person. I
would realize that here is this great man, the
tremendous lawyer, the legendary fighter for
justice, right here in front of me. I told him
that I had seen images of him in documentaries on
TV dedicating himself to important legal cases
that he had participated in from a very young
age. With pride I would tell people watching,
"that is the lawyer of the Five". It did not
matter how much I read or heard about Len I knew
through his humility and modesty that there was a
lot I still had to discover about this man who
had dedicated his life to his profession.

Len always insisted that our case, like the
others that he had dedicated lots of his time to,
was essentially a political one. He cautioned us
from the start that this struggle would be long
and difficult. His experience with the "system"
had taught him that. For our part, beyond the
professional relationship we had, we always
thought of him as one compañero in the battle for justice.

Len leaves us at an important moment, but he
leaves us prepared to carry on the path. On more
than one occasion he expressed his admiration and
respect for the other lawyers on our legal team,
and I think that he has left confident that our case is in good hands.

Like other people, who during these years have
accompanied us in our struggle to make justice
prevail, he will not be with us to see the
inevitable triumph. We are confident that day
will arrive and to Len, and to all the others, we
will pay them a well deserved tribute in our homeland.

On behalf of the Cuban Five, and our families,
and from the millions of Cubans, and brothers and
sisters from all over the world who trusted and
admired him, we send our most sincere condolences to Len's family and friends.

Leonard Weinglass, Presente!

Gerardo Hernandez Nordelo
USP Victorville, California

March 23, 2011

Thursday, February 03, 2011

Another visit to Gerardo in prison

Miami Herald allegations were “ridiculous,” he says

By Danny Glover and Saul Landau

On our third visit, the neo-fascist architecture of the U.S. Federal Penitentiary in Victorville California (built in 2006 under W. Bush) has become a familiar sight. The American Barbed Wire Industry, we think, must have lobbied hard to get prison construction commissars to allocate money for several football fields of pointed projections sticking out of the woven metal barrier; very anti-neighborly. What’s missing from the picture of miles of curled wire mounted on both sides of the walls on this monstrous concrete structure set in the Mojave Desert? A sign: “Only in America.” Where else would such a “monument” get built for a mission to “rehabilitate?”

Gerardo jumps from his plastic chair and we hug. Full of energy, smiling and in good physical shape, he tells us he had to wait for 25 minutes at the cell-block gate before a considerate guard finally allowed him to enter the visitors’ room even though other guards came and went – and ignored his request to see his visitors. A typical incident in the daily grind of a political prisoner in a maximum-security federal pen!

We ask him how he responded to the December 26, 2010, Miami Herald story by Jay Weaver. The headline, “Cuban Spymaster Now Claims Brothers to the Rescue Shooting was Outside Cuban Airspace.” The story suggested Gerardo disagreed with Cuba’s version of its MIGs shooting down two Brothers to the Rescue planes over Cuban airspace on February 24, 1996.

“That’s ridiculous,” said Gerardo. His legal appeal questions the competence of his public defender to properly defend him, but he never expressed or implied differences with Cuba’s position. The appeal focuses on errors made by his trial lawyer and the prosecutor, which denied him due process.

The government also improperly concealed evidence (cables) that showed Gerardo had no information about Cuba’s intention to shoot down the Brothers’ planes.

The prosecutor never proved Cuba planned to shoot down the planes in international airspace, much less that Gerardo knew about it. But the climate in which the trial took place bore the stains of media contamination. Gerardo’s appeal shows that during the trial “journalists” on the U.S. payroll presented newspaper and TV stories that painted the defendants -- and Cuba -- in a bad light. All five Cuban agents got tried and sentenced in a prosecution-polluted climate.

“It’s a joke,” he laughed, referring to the Herald article, and his trial. “I’m sure every Cuban knows I have no disagreement with my government on shooting down the airplanes. I knew nothing about the flights that day, so I couldn’t know they would be shot down. I believe it happened over Cuban airspace, which is not a crime under international law.”

Neither The Herald nor the trial jury heard testimony or saw evidence that Gerardo possessed advance knowledge of Cuba’s alleged plan to shoot down Brothers to the Rescue planes. In the early 1990s, the Brothers claimed their mission was to help rescue Cuban rafters adrift in the Florida straits, but after a 1995 U.S.-Cuba Migration accord dictated the return of Cubans to the island, Brothers began a new mission: flying over Havana and dropping leaflets.

On February 24, 1996, after repeated warnings not to fly over the island, Basulto, the President of the BTTR, announced his forthcoming flight, and the FAA also informed Cuba of flight details. The pilots and co-pilots of two planes died. Basulto returned safely to Miami.

Even if Gerardo had advised his government of the impending flights – which he did not – how would a Cuban intelligence agent know his government would shoot them down even though Cuba had every right to do so over its airspace?

The Miami jury convicted Gerardo of conspiracy to commit murder by aiding and abetting a plan to shoot down civilian aircraft in international airspace -- not proven. The judge sentenced him to two consecutive life terms.

When we suggested the reporter who said Gerardo disagreed with his government, but did not interview him, should qualify for the Mussolini Journalism Award, Gerardo agreed. “Yes, Mussolini was a journalist before he got into politics.”

The story should have said that Gerardo did not receive due process. Cuban agents tried in Miami in 2001 -- the equivalent of Jews tried in Berlin in 1938!

Gerardo, upbeat and eager to share, told us he grew up in Mantilla, a Havana neighborhood, where Cuban novelist Leonardo Padura (El Conde mysteries) lived. He learned the possibilities and depths of friendship under socialism, where men talk honestly from the soul and don’t have to compete for money, “like the guys in Abel Prieto’s novel, The Flight of the Cat.”

“Bitterness doesn’t help the spirit,” he said. “Guillermo Cabrera Infante’s Tres Tristes Tigres is brilliant and insightful. Compare it to his shrill diatribes against the revolution from which one learns nothing.”

The prison photographer – another inmate – took our pictures. Then we ate junk food from vending machines – all that’s available – and discussed reforms in Cuba.

“I thought Raul’s speech (President Raul Castro, December 18, 2010) was needed. We must change to survive. We must become productive and efficient.”

“Visiting is over,” a guard announces. Gerardo lines up against the wall with other prisoners. We huddle near the door with other visitors. He raises his fist. “Keep the faith.” He smiles confidently.

“He has Mandela-like qualities,” Danny says.

Saul agrees.

Saul Landau’s new film on the Cuban Five case and its history -- WILL THE REAL TERRORIST PLEASE STAND UP -- will soon be available. Danny Glover is an activist and an actor. He produced THE BLACK POWER MIXTAPE – premiered at Sundance.

Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Truth will Prevail in Favor of Gerardo Hernandez

Jose Pertierra, Immigration attorney in Washington DC, and associate of the Pertierra & Toro, P.C law firm, receives us honest, friendly and uninhibited in Havana. He has more than a few websites on the case of Cuban Five open in his computer, and then starts pouring his reflections on the progress of the process that seeks for justice for Gerardo Hernandez and his four other comrades unjustly imprisoned in the United Status.


by Miguel Maury ain.cubaweb.cu

Being a typical Cuban he understands our intentions to clarify, as much as possible about the habeas corpus requested for Gerardo.

HABEAS CORPUS

About the legal meaning of such legal action brought by Gerardo’s defense team and its purpose, the lawyer graduated from George Washington University reports that it is a writ that has existed for centuries in the Anglo jurisprudence and not simply in the U.S. one.

“The habeas corpus is requested by a defendant when he thinks his fundamental, constitutional rights, have been violated, and then he goes to court to have his sentence reviewed, in order to determine whether or not such rights have been broken”

Author of numerous articles on extradition, immigration and international law, Pertierra explains that Hernández Nordelo- who was denied the right to a re-sentencing process in late 2009 and through which the sentences of three of his comrades were significantly reduced- has come before the courts to determine whether it is right for him to have effective assistance of his counsel.

“In October last year - he says - his lawyers filed an appeal before the Federal Court in Miami, headed by Judge (Joan) Lennard (who tried him in 2001) and now, in the coming days, the district attorney’s office”

Executive Clemency

A man of fast and confident answers, Pertierra speaks accurately when asked about what other resort the U.S. legal system would allow, if the petition of habeas corpus does not yield the desired result.

"The defense can continue appealing, he assures, and backed by his experience in legal practice, he says:

"These processes often take a long time; there are still several stages to go through, but I keep insisting that the most effective way to solve this case is through what the U.S. Constitution calls an executive clemency, that this time would correspond to President (Barack) Obama.”

Then he adds that the current President, if so he wishes, would not even have to pardon the Cuban Five, but simply keep the sentences, taking as served the 12 years they have been in prison and only pardons them of those that they have left.

According to Pertierra, at the end of each year, the occupant of the White House’s Oval Office reviews those files that deserve that kind of leniency
and allows inmates go free after considering their sentence, however long, as time already served.

CARTER AND PUERTORICAN INDEPENDENCE FIGHTERS

With decades of experience in the US legal system, Pertierra goes to the legal background of the implementation of such legal figure in the United States.

He recalls that in times of Jimmy Carter Administration, when Washington asked Cuba to release several prisoners that were incarcerated for working for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Cuba asked the U.S. government for the revision of long sentences imposed on a group of Puerto Rican patriots imprisoned in that country.

“That was how Carter, without the pardon, gave “executive clemency” to Lolita Lebron, Rafael Cancel Miranda, Irving Flores and Andrés Figueroa Cordero, separatists who remained imprisoned for 25 years," he said.
- Could it be that in the case of Gerardo can not aspire to anything other than the executive clemency?
- Only if you win the writ of habeas corpus ..., the defense focused with particular emphasis on the innocence of Gerardo in connection with the shooting down by the Cuban air force of two planes of Brothers to the Rescue, on February 24, 1996, something put forward by the jury in the trial of 2001 to give him the two life sentences plus 15 years that he has today against him.”

GERARDO VS. DEFENSE

Pertierra then voices his opinion on some articles published by news agencies in Miami, where they claim a contradiction arose between Gerardo and his defense team on where exactly the two planes were shot down in 1996: “The document written by lawyers Thomas C. Goldstein and Richard C. Kluhk, also says that the team member, Paul Mc Kenna, didn’t make an effective defense at the 2001 trial.


“It adds that Mc Kenna diminished Gerardo’s the constitutional, since he made too much emphasis on the place where the shoot-down took place, rather than focus on whether Gerardo knew it or not.


“The facts show that he did not know what would happen to these pilots, whether in international waters or in Cuban ones, and that should really be the “heart” of the defense,” he says.


Pertierra recalls that in the 2001 trial, the prosecution itself admitted not having the evidence to prove the defendant's participation in a conspiracy to kill anyone, least of all those guys, and asked the judge, even, to withdraw that charge, to which she objected.


We remind him on how flawed was the venue chosen for the trial, something that the defense has always stressed- even requested a transfer of venue - the attorney places that act as an indisputable violation of the provisions of the U.S. jurisprudence on that regard.

POSADA NOW LANES

But Pertierra not only has legal grounds to speak of the Five, but also of the other side of the coin, ie, against who they fought: monitor possible terrorist actions against Cuba and even the U.S. itself.
Recently threatened with death in the hotel where he was staying in El Paso, the Cuban lawyer also represents the government of Venezuela in the extradition case of Luis Posada Carriles, who is being tried in that city of Texas, for immigration offenses.


“This murderer is not charged for murder or terrorism, but for lying, so it would not astonish me they found him guilty of lying. This is a relatively minor offense,” he says wryly.


Pertierra explains that while Posada Carriles was in prison for a year and a half on suspicion of lying, the judge who is examining his case has advanced that if convicted on charges of perjury, he probably would not go to jail because what corresponds to that crime in that state, is precisely that time and he already served it.


With the calculation of the odds on the future of the ongoing process of El Paso against Posada Carriles, he stresses the lack of willingness by the U.S. government to prosecute and convict “that annoying host.”


Pertierra alludes to the past as a terrorist and a torturer, under the auspices of the CIA, of the famous character in more than a Latin American nation and especially Venezuela.


He says it is precisely because of that annoying past, that “Washington does not want to really judge him.”


“There are many skeletons in the closet," he says in reference to how much the notorious murderer of 73 people during the bombing of the Cubana airliner near Barbados in 1976, and the main culprit behind the explosions in hotels Havana in 1997 and 1998 knows.


Pertierra is now in El Paso, following closely the trial of Posada Carriles and writing daily, El Diario de El Paso (www.cubadebate.cu) on the events in court.


"I keep thinking that the U.S. should be processing an extradition case against Posada in El Paso for 73 counts of murder and not for 11 counts of lying, but to Washington the Cuban victims are second class and the CIA terrorists are good terrorists ", he said. "Terrorism, however, you can not fight it a la carte. There are no good terrorists and bad terrorists.

All are equal. There are no victims of first and second category, "he said. At the insistence on the likely future of the process and given the apparent moves by Washington to extend it, Pertierra is blunt: "The U.S. government is aware that at the advanced age of its protégée and natural logic he doesn’t have many years to live, they play to the delay in waiting for a death for them that would be opportune.”


I insist on the perjury charge being ridiculous...


“Imagine that they capture Osama Bin Laden in Pakistan, the United States requests his extradition and the Pakistani government responds that, rather than extradite him for all the murders he committed in the Twin Towers and the Pentagon, they just want to prosecute him for lying. “How would the United States react to something like that?, It is not difficult to imagine!”


However, Pertierra remains hopeful that justice can break through, in the case of Posada Carriles, as in case against Gerardo and his companions Antonio Guerrero, René González, Ramón Labañino and Fernando González.


“If President Obama wants to leave behind the Cold War and move in a more decent and healthy way, to heal the wounds of many years of warfare against Cuba, he should start to do real justice in the case of the Five and particularly with Gerardo , where the truth will eventually prevail.”

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

The Habeas Corpus Appeal of Gerardo Hernández, One of the Cuban Five

Date of publication at Tlaxcala: 19/01/2011
Translations available: Español

No evidence exists that Hernández had any advance knowledge whatsoever regarding Cuban Air Force shoot down of Brothers to the Rescue planes - inferences made at trial were "tragically, utterly false"
The Habeas Corpus Appeal of Gerardo Hernández, One of the Cuban Five



Machetera

“Gerardo Hernández never did receive due process of law either on the part of the prosecutors or his own defense.”
Leonard Weinglass

Attorneys for Gerardo Hernández, a Cuban citizen serving two consecutive life sentences plus 15 years in the maximum security wing of the US Federal Penitentiary at Victorville, California have filed his final appeal in the US legal system. The evidence supporting his right to a new trial is staggering.

Gerardo Hernández

Hernández is one of ten Cubans who, like the Russian agents arrested in the summer of 2010 in New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts, were arrested by the FBI in Miami in 1998 and charged with failing to register as agents of a foreign government, as well as conspiracy to commit espionage. Unlike the Russians, who were swiftly deported and never faced a trial, five of the arrested Cubans quickly pled guilty and were rewarded with reduced sentences and green cards, while the remaining five, including Hernández, were thrown into separate solitary confinement cells for nearly a year and a half to await their court date. All the evidence for, against, and irrelevant to their cases was locked away by federal authorities under cover of national security. The government’s manipulation of the evidence is one of the issues raised in the appeal.

During the 1990s, as rightwing Cuban Americans in Miami rejoiced at the toppling of Cuba’s principal sponsor, the Soviet Union, their actions against Cuba grew ever more provocative as they aimed for a similar result. Small Miami based boats and planes began buzzing in and out of Cuban seas and airspace, shooting at beachside hotels, dropping objects from the skies, and meanwhile, mercenaries were hired to plant bombs and bring weapons into the country, with tragic and lethal results. The Cuban agents were sent to Miami in order to report back to Cuba and thwart these actions, which Cuba quite understandably views as terrorist attacks.
Hernández was their leader.
As the trial date approached in 2000 for the “Cuban Five” (as they are known in the US), an additional count was suddenly added to the first two against Hernández. The third count was “conspiracy to commit murder by supporting and implementing a plan to shoot down United States civilian aircraft outside of Cuban and United States airspace.”
Nearly five years prior to the trial, on February 24, 1996, two planes belonging to one of the Miami paramilitary groups known as Brothers to the Rescue (BTTR) [Hermanos al Rescate] were shot down by Cuban fighter jets as they were flying toward Cuba, in restricted airspace they had violated many times before. BTTR was headed by José Basulto, an original member of the CIA-sponsored Bay of Pigs mercenary brigade, who in 1962 had inaugurated the practice of attacking Cuban beachside hotels from an offshore vessel, when he attacked a hotel in the Miramar district with a 20 mm cannon which he shot from a speedboat.
Four people were killed in the destruction of the planes, three of them US citizens and the fourth a Cuban with US residency. A third plane escaped that day, containing Basulto, and his three passengers. It was the government’s contention that Hernández knew in advance about a Cuban government plan to shoot down the planes, that the plan was an illegal one by virtue of the charge that Cuba intended to shoot the planes down in international airspace – not Cuban airspace - and that Hernández agreed to help with that plan.
After a seven month trial that was marked by a media frenzy unusual even by Miami standards, the Five were convicted on all counts.

The initial appeals process

Hernández’s case, along with those of his compatriots, was appealed. In 2005, a three judge appellate panel unanimously reversed all the convictions due to community prejudice and the failure of the trial court to move the trial out of Miami.

Judge Phyllis A. Kravitch, US Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals

The government sought a review of that decision before the entire 11 members of the Eleventh Circuit Court, called the En Banc court. Despite the previous unanimous decision overturning the convictions, the En Banc court reversed that decision, reinstating the convictions and sending the remaining issues, aside from venue, back to a three judge panel. That panel, composed of Judges Birch, Pryor and Kravitch, affirmed the convictions on a 2 to 1 decision, but ordered three of the defendants to be re-sentenced.
As for Hernández, his two life sentences plus 15 years were upheld. But Judge Kravitch wrote a very clear dissent on the issue of Hernández’s conviction. And Judge Birch, speaking specifically about Hernández’s conviction, called it a “very close case.”
Leonard Weinglass, one of the attorneys involved in Hernández’s appeal, urges the reading of Kravitch’s dissent. “Here you have a well-respected senior judge on the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, who wrote an eloquent dissent against Hernández’s conviction, saying that he ought not to have been convicted, had no knowledge of what was going to happen with the planes that day, and that Cuba had the right to self-defense. This is not something we made up,” said Weinglass.
Weinglass also calls attention to the language in Birch’s opinion. Note, says Weinglass, “he did not say it was a ‘close’ question, but a ‘very close’ question.” Effectively, only Pryor, one of the most conservative judges in the entire country, did not express any doubts about Hernández’s conviction.

Habeas Corpus Appeal

A habeas corpus appeal cannot be filed until all other appeals are exhausted, and indeed, after the reconsideration by Birch, Pryor and Kravitch, the case of the Cuban Five traveled to the Supreme Court which, in June 2009, declined to hear it.
This is the kind of appeal that Hernández’s current legal team has now filed. With all its appendices, it is hundreds of pages long. It focuses at length on the errors made by Hernández’s public defender, Paul McKenna, which together with the violations by the prosecution, had the practical effect of denying him his constitutionally mandated right to due process. It also presents new evidence that has been discovered since the original trial, evidence which Weinglass calls “evidence of a constitutional dimension.”



Three actors perform in anti-Cuban sitcom produced by US Government funded TV Martí (Photo: Alan Díaz, Associated Press)

Much of that evidence involves the 2006 discovery that many of the journalists producing incendiary stories on the trial in 2000/2001 were simultaneously on the US government payroll, reporting for Radio and TV Martí, anti-Cuba propaganda stations funded and operated by the US government. The struggle to obtain information about the reporters involved in the media manipulation of community attitudes during the trial is another interesting story all by itself.
Some of the new evidence also comes from the classified information that the government improperly tried to conceal in order to better make its case while simultaneously denying Hernández the opportunity to defend himself. The appeal shows how Hernández’s rights to due process were violated when the government excluded Hernández and McKenna from a private ex parte hearing where materials which included high frequency messages from the Cuban government to its agents were reviewed and decisions taken on which would be admitted at trial.
“Had [Hernández] known of the existence of these high frequency messages (it was later known that the government disclosed only 44 out of approximately 350 intercepted messages) and the additional classified communications, he would have sought to introduce them into evidence to show that he had no knowledge that the government of Cuba intended to illegally shoot down the Brothers to the Rescue aircraft.”[1]

Media mischaracterization of the appeal

It is practically impossible to explain the countless and often extremely technical due process violations outlined in the appeal, through the economical technique of quickly helicoptering into the documents, extracting selected sensational quotes, and then contacting sources on both sides for comment. Not that this hasn’t been tried. The Miami Herald gave it a go on December 26, 2010, in a story filed by Jay Weaver emblazoned with the headline: “Cuban Spymaster now claims Brothers to the Rescue shooting was outside Cuban airspace.”
The story is a perfect illustration of why hasty and selective reading is no substitute for real investigative journalism, though it may have perfectly adequate results as propaganda. [Also note the loaded language in the headline: “Shooting” in lieu of “Shoot down” and “Spymaster” instead of, for instance, “Cuban Agent”.]
The case made by the Herald is quite different from the one actually being made by Hernández’s attorneys.

Defense errors

Hernández’s habeas corpus appeal explains that one of the most grievous errors made in his defense was the failure to advise him that he had the right to ask for a severance, in order to be tried separately on the third murder conspiracy count, rather than at the same trial on the espionage conspiracy and foreign agent counts. The practical effect of this failure was that all five Cubans were tried and sentenced in a climate of guilt by association, but also that McKenna was so busy trying to deal with the third murder conspiracy count that he essentially abandoned his client on the other two.
As well, by failing to sever the trial, other witnesses who might have been able to testify to Hernández’s lack of knowledge about any shoot down, such as the other five Cubans who quickly pled guilty, and specifically, Hernández’s co-defendant René González, who had infiltrated BTTR and could have testified that Hernández had no special knowledge about any shoot down, were unable to testify in his defense. The problem of González being unable to testify might have been resolved to some extent in an un-severed trial through a legal instrument called a Byrd Affidavit, but McKenna did not utilize it.
“Had counsel evaluated and investigated such issues and consulted with his client, he would have been able to obtain a Byrd affidavit from Rene Gonzalez to show that whatever knowledge Hernandez may have had or conveyed regarding an impending confrontation of BTTR with Cuba was of the same general understanding as that in the public domain, that Cuba might attempt to shoot down aircraft if they continued to violate Cuban airspace and that he understood Cuba to have the lawful right to do so within Cuban territory. Hernandez was unaware of any plan to act unlawfully or to act in a manner that could legitimately provoke military retaliation.”[2]

How the Miami Herald got it wrong

Another serious defense error, and one that is perhaps easier understood in hindsight, at least for non-lawyers, was the defense effort to revisit the decision made at the UN Security Council which pinned the location of the shoot down in international airspace rather than Cuban airspace.

UN Security Council

The decision was pushed through the Security Council by Madeleine Albright notwithstanding the fact that after months of investigation that were repeatedly extended when the US failed to meet deadlines for the submission of its evidence, the UN’s civil aviation arm - the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) - had found that the US and Cuban radar data had “significant and irreconcilable differences.” As a result of these differences and other irregularities, the ICAO Council refused to endorse its own investigative report. This did not present Albright with a particularly significant obstacle, and she and her diplomatic colleagues set the location themselves.
McKenna erroneously opted to try to convince the Miami jury that the UN Security Council had erred, and endeavored to retry its decision in the Miami courtroom. By this time though, the Security Council decision had already been used in another Miami court proceeding as a basis to obtain access to frozen Cuban assets in order to compensate the families of the downed fliers and their attorneys. In trying to persuade the jury of twelve non-aviation experts to revisit the ICAO investigation and decide that Cuba was right and the US government was wrong – a hopeless proposition in a community where the downed BTTR fliers had been cast as heroes – McKenna was slogging uphill against not one but two legal precedents. The only thing this kind of defense managed was to harden the jury’s antagonism toward his client. But more importantly, it was not the case he was asked to defend.
It’s worth re-examining the third count of the indictment to fully grasp this point.
“Conspiracy to commit murder by supporting and implementing a plan to shoot down United States civilian aircraft outside of Cuban and United States airspace.” [Italics added.]
In other words, a plan to shoot down aircraft within Cuban airspace would have been no crime at all – this was where McKenna set off down a doomed road paved with good intentions, by seeking to free his client on the basis of the argument that no crime had actually been committed.

Historical questions

Despite the legal precedents, as a historical matter, the shoot down location does remain an open question as far as factual evidence is concerned. The final appendix in the appeal makes this clear: US satellite data would be the most objective and definitive way to resolve the location question once and for all, but despite a recommendation from his aviation expert witness, George Buchner, McKenna never requested that data, nor has it ever been released. Buchner says that the ICAO investigative team also tried and failed to obtain this data.



NASA satellite photo showing fires burning in Cuba and Florida on April 3, 2004

Another appendix in the appeal, the declaration by Professor John Quigley, an expert in international law, makes clear that some of the questions McKenna sought to argue at the Miami trial, such as whether BTTR’s planes were actually military or civilian, were erroneous and irrelevant in light of established international law: “…the relevant inquiry was whether the territorial state might reasonably perceive an imminent threat from the intrusion, rather than whether the aircraft was civil or military in character.”
This particular argument had truly devastating consequences for Hernández, “difficult to fathom and painful to contemplate,” when the jury was incorrectly instructed to “deliberate whether Cuba’s fighter jets properly identified BTTR’s light Cessna aircraft as ‘military’ planes under ICAO standards, and, if so, whether those BTTR planes were in fact shot down as a ‘last resort’…”[3] It was an issue a world apart from and totally irrelevant to the actual conspiracy charge faced by Hernández.

Through the looking glass

On the face of it, a shoot down outside of Cuban airspace makes no logical sense whatsoever. Cuba was certainly aggrieved by the constant air incursions by BTTR – one of the most interesting parts of the appeal is the appendix which includes the ICAO investigative report, a document that has never been publicly revealed until now (ICAO Report Part 1, Part 2). BTTR planes had roared “at rooftop level” through downtown Havana, tossing leaflets and religious medals out the windows six months prior to the downings, something as dangerous as it is illegal, not only in Cuba, but everywhere. The planes enjoyed unusual access to the US Naval Base in Guantánamo, and used that access to buzz whatever Cuban territory caught their fancy “on the spur of the moment.” Cuba’s right to defend itself against such intrusions is unquestionable.
But a shoot down outside of Cuban airspace would, and did, result in international condemnation of Cuba, open the door to the seizure of Cuban assets frozen since 1961, and most damaging, provide the impetus to set the US blockade of Cuba in stone, through the anti-Cuba legislation known as Helms-Burton that was creeping through the US Congress in the mid-1990s. Before the shoot down, Clinton had been threatening to veto the bill, if by some miracle it were to pass. After the shoot down, the law passed easily. It may have been something short of the confrontation hoped for by Basulto, the self-confessed terrorist who was continually looking for a Bay of Pigs do-over and still asks why US fighter jets were not launched in retaliation on the 24th, but Helms-Burton has been destructive enough all on its own.
At Hernández’s trial, establishing the location of the shoot down was simply not the question at hand, and the government could simply point to the Security Council decision in any case. In order to convict Hernández, the government needed to prove that there was an illegal plan to shoot down BTTR planes in international airspace, not Cuban airspace, that Hernández knew about this illegal plan and that he agreed to support it.
It couldn’t be done.

It depends on what the meaning of “or” is

To overcome the leap of logic necessary to believe, counter-intuitively, that Cuba deliberately planned to shoot BTTR planes down in international airspace rather than Cuban airspace, the government presented the tortured argument that what was really bothering Cuba about BTTR’s aerial invasions was not their dangerous low-level cowboy flights over congested areas, nor Basulto’s jamming of radio frequencies used by commercial airliners traveling through Cuba’s air corridor with extemporaneous speeches about his rights to violate anyone’s restricted airspace as a “free Cuban.”
According to the US government, what Cuba really wanted to accomplish through a planned shoot down in international airspace was to stop BTTR from dropping leaflets from a spot just outside Cuban airspace where wind currents might carry them ashore. The ICAO report clearly showed how the leaflets had actually been dropped inside Cuban airspace, and Basulto himself had said on the radio in Miami that he’d dropped them from inside Cuban airspace, but suddenly all that was forgotten (and never rebutted by the defense).

Document from ICAO Investigative Report which shows the flight path of BTTR planes on January 13, 1996, as they crossed into Cuban airspace to drop leaflets that would be carried over Havana and its southern outskirts (gray shading).

Finally, in an argument that only lawyers could possibly make, the government pointed to “an alleged message that asked agents who penetrated BTTR to report any planned ‘leaflet dropping missions or incursions into Cuban airspace.’” [Emphasis added.]
Government lawyers pointed to the word “or” as “proof that the Cuban plan included confrontation in international airspace to stop the leafleting.”[4]
It was an exquisitely technical legal argument, but as far as Hernández was concerned, there was still absolutely no evidence that he had any inside information about a shoot down planned to take place anywhere, either inside or outside of Cuban airspace.

“A confrontation does not necessarily mean a shootdown.”

In her dissent, Judge Kravitch pointed out that at best, the coded messages submitted by the government as evidence showed that Hernández (like everyone, including BTTR) knew that there would be a “confrontation” of some sort.
She added, “A confrontation does not necessarily mean a shoot down.” The evidence that BTTR itself expected nothing more than a confrontation possibly resulting in a forced landing was contained in a homemade video deliberately left behind at BTTR headquarters on February 24th. In it, flight participants said they would either blink furiously or try not to blink as some sort of coded message to Miami, should they be forced to confess on Cuban television.
Kravitch explained further:
“It is not enough for the Government to show that a shoot down merely occurred in international airspace: the Government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Hernandez agreed to a shoot down in international airspace. Although such an agreement may be proven with circumstantial evidence, here, the Government failed to provide either direct or circumstantial evidence that Hernandez agreed to a shoot down in international airspace. Instead, the evidence points toward a confrontation in Cuban airspace, thus negating the requirement that he agreed to commit an unlawful act.
…the fact that the intercepted communications after the shoot down show that Hernandez was congratulated for his role and that he acknowledged participation and called it a “success” does not clearly establish an agreement to a shoot down in international airspace. The Government cannot point to any evidence that indicates Hernandez agreed to a shoot down in international, as opposed to Cuban, airspace.”
Hernández has consistently maintained that the coded message he sent to Cuba after February 24th, where he said “the operation to which we contributed a grain of salt ended successfully”[5] was a reference not to the operation to confront BTTR planes, but to an entirely different one, that of returning another agent to Cuba. He says the government purposely created “a cloud…of confusion” about the two operations in order to use that particular message in its case against him. McKenna, beavering away at the shootdown location, failed to object to or counter the government’s cynical misappropriation of the message.
Even if one accepts the government’s mischaracterization of that particular message, Kravitch explained that this is still not sufficient for conviction – if Hernández had really referred to the shoot down of an enemy plane as a “success” that still does not mean he agreed to a plan to shoot it down in “international” rather than Cuban airspace.

Richard Gere’s Cuban double



Cuban agent and former military pilot Juan Pablo Roque

The agent whose return Hernández was referring to in the “grain of salt”[6] message was Juan Pablo Roque, an intriguing character in the case. Often referred to as someone who bears a striking resemblance to Richard Gere, Roque snorkeled his way to the US base at Guantánamo and soon found himself in Miami, where he captured the hearts of Basulto and his clan with the tale that he was a Cuban military pilot who’d been grounded and therefore become disillusioned. The Cuban American National Foundation (CANF) even facilitated a vanity press publication of his memoirs, while Roque began quietly moonlighting for the FBI, providing information about BTTR’s concealed, less savory, drug trafficking activities and weapons smuggling plans.
But practically as soon as he arrived in Miami, Roque suffered from unbearable homesickness and asked to be transferred back. Hernández was tasked with arranging the defector’s re-defection. “Operation Venezia” was planned as a way to get Roque back to Cuba and simultaneously capitalize on the intelligence Roque had gathered, through planned press conferences where he would reveal much the same information as he had given the FBI.



José Basulto, left, with Cuban agents Juan Pablo Roque, right, and René González, front. The 2506 numbers on the plane refer to the CIA-sponsored Bay of Pigs brigade, to which both Basulto and Luis Posada Carriles belonged.

A top secret Cuban document contained in the appeal confirms that this denunciation was the main thrust behind Operation Venezia, and that Roque’s return was approved by Cuban intelligence headquarters for “either the end of February or beginning of March, 1996”[7] depending on commercial flight availabilities.
At the time of the trial, much was made of the fact that Roque had slipped away on February 23rd and arrived in Cuba either the day of the shoot down or the day after. But the timing was coincidental, based largely on Roque’s insistence that he be back in time for his son’s birthday on the 26th. Also, the shoot down on the 24th was demonstrably at odds with Operation Venezia’s objectives. Although Roque appeared on CNN with Lucia Newman on the 27th and again in an interview with the Cuban newspaper Juventud Rebelde on March 3rd, still maintaining his cover in order to protect the agents remaining in Miami, the tsunami of negative press about the shoot down largely overshadowed the negative information he revealed about BTTR in the interview.

Too little too late

Toward the end of the trial, Hernández’s defender seemed to have realized he’d been chasing a red herring. After six long months of painstaking efforts to convince the jury that the shoot down location had been erroneously decided, he suddenly changed course and told the jury that all the evidence he had presented to them over the previous six months was irrelevant. This surely did not endear him or his client to jury members anxious to get on with their lives.
What mattered, he said, was that the government could not prove that Hernández knew anything at all about an illegal shoot down plan. But it was too late. The damage had been done.
The appeal says that “to his credit” McKenna has recognized his errors in the original trial and agreed to testify at a habeas corpus hearing in order to provide evidence as to why Hernández should receive a new trial.
That evidentiary hearing is likely to be held once all the replies have been submitted in the case, sometime between March and June of this year, although according to Weinglass, it is still unknown whether Judge Lenard will hold onto the case and hold that hearing herself, or refer it to a magistrate, as frequently occurs in Miami.

An invisible force

In the meantime, in the desolate high desert of California, Hernández continues to be an active advocate in his own case and that of rest of the Five. This sometimes leads to peculiar resentments on the part of his jailers. “You get too much mail,” he is told, and in the upside-down logic of the federal prison system, the solution is to hold his mail captive on occasion until the excess becomes an avalanche. He continues to endure extra-judicial punishments such as the denial of a visa, 13 years running, for his wife to visit him. He is denied email access which, in contrast, is granted to hardened, proven violent offenders incarcerated in the same facility. Last summer he was suddenly, inexplicably, thrown into the prison “hole” and some weeks later, following an international outcry, released.
Regardless of whether Hernández is ultimately granted his right to due process through a new trial, he guards an undiminished sense of optimism, tempered with realism. Of the multitude of efforts to obtain his freedom he says, “It’s like water on a rock.” And even the hardest rocks give way over time.



Billboards like this one are found throughout Cuba, where the Cuban Five are known as the Five Heroes. Volverán means “They will return.” (Photo: Bill Hackwell)

I would like to thank Nelson Valdés, Manuel Cedeño Berrueta and Manuel Talens for their assistance in the preparation and translation of this report.

Notes

[1] Gerardo Hernández, Movant, vs. United States of America, Respondent - Memorandum in Support of Motion to Vacate, Set Aside, or Correct Judgment and Sentence under 28 U.SC. § 2255, p. 79

[2] Ibid, p. 19

[3] Ibid, p. 37

[4] Ibid, p. 31

[5] Ibid, p. 83

[6] “Grain of salt” is likely to be a mistranslation of Hernández’s original Spanish language message. It is extremely improbable that Hernández would have written “granito de sal,” instead of “granito de arena,” which means “grain of sand.” The transcription of the Spanish language interview conducted with Hernández by Saul Landau confirms this.

[7] Ibid, Appendix B