Showing posts with label Rene Gonzalez. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rene Gonzalez. Show all posts

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Rene Gonzalez offers to renounce his U.S. Citizenship to return to Cuba

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Rene
Photo: Bill Hackwell
On Friday June 22, René González Sehwerert presented a new motion before the South Florida District Court asking that they modify his conditions of supervised release and that he be allowed to return to his country of Cuba where his family resides.

González was released on October 7, 2011, after serving his entire sentence in a U.S. federal prison, but he has been obligated to remain three more years under supervised probation on U.S. soil.
In the latest motion presented last week, González included a number of reasons to be allowed to complete the rest of his probation in Cuba. On this occasion, González offered the Court that he would renounce his U.S. citizenship to make it clear that he has no intention of remaining or returning in the future to the United States.

A similar motion to this latest one was presented by González before he was released from prison. Then, the Judge found that the Defendant’s Motion was premature because a term of supervised release does not commence until an individual is “released from imprisonment”, and some amount of time on supervised release needs to pass before the Court is able to properly evaluate the characteristics of the defendant once he or she has been released from prison.

After 8 months of complying with all probation requisites, René González asks to modify the conditions of his probation to be allowed to return to Cuba to be reunited with his wife, his daughters and the rest of his family.

The United States cannot persist in keeping René González, who when asked to resign his citizenship, expressed firmly that he is neither interested in living in the United States, nor in returning to this country where he has no working, social, or family links.

What arguments will the State Department use next to continue the unjust punishment of René?

Read the Motion

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Anti-Terrorist Cuban Fighter Rene Gonzalez in Cuba

Havana, Mar 30 (Prensa Latina) Rene Gonzalez, one of the five anti-terrorist Cuban fighters unfairly given harsh prison sentences in the United States, arrived to Cuba on Friday on a family, private visit in the wake of authorization by a US judge to visit his gravely ill brother.

According to information released by the TV news program, Rene arrived minutes alter midday.

On February 24, Rene had filed through his lawyer an emergency motion before the South Florida District Court, requesting an authorization to visit his brother, seriously ill in Cuba.

Nearly a month later, on March 19, Judge Joan Lenard, who have been handling the case of The Cuban Five since the start of their proceedings, authorized the trip for 15 days under certain conditions, including obtaining all US government travel permits needed.

She also set as a prerequisite failing a detailed travel schedule, his location in Cuba and information of contact in the country, as well as a systematic phone contact with his probation officer.

The judge also made clear that all conditions of Rene's supervised release remain unchanged and he has to go back to the United States as soon as the two weeks pass from the date of his trip.

After having suffered 13 years of unfair prison, Rene is under a supervised release regime for another three years during which he has to remain in the United States, which constitutes an additional sanction.

The decision of authorizing his trip is fully in line with conditions established for his supervised release, which allow him to travel to Cuba after an approval by the probation officer or the judge.

Even the US Government, which has opposed all motions filed by Rene to be allowed a permanent return to Cuba and his temporary visit to his brother, admitted that conditions of his supervised release do not prevent him from visiting our country.

In this regard, as of March 7, 2011, the Attorney General's Office argued that the terms of Rene's supervised release do not prevent him from travelling to Cuba during that period. "Nothing will prevent him from requesting his probation officer (or the court, if he was denied that by the former) a permit to travel to Cuba to visit his wife, his old parents or other relatives."

In the motion filed by his lawyer, Rene said he would comply with the terms established for the visit and return to the United States.

Despite the terms imposed, our people, with deep respect, welcomes home our beloved Rene, and do not stop fighting for his final, permanent return home along with his four close brothers, says the press release.

Rene Gonzalez, along with his comrades Gerardo Hernandez, Ramon Labanino, Antonio Guerrero and Fernando Gonzalez, was detained in 1998 in the United States for monitoring Miami-based violent groups operating against Cuba.

Monday, March 26, 2012

Rene González and Alan Gross: speed and bacon

I suppose the Latin American term for an apples and oranges comparison is peras y manzanas. [Pears and apples.] Somehow it doesn’t have quite the same ring. In Spain, the expressions are funnier. No hay que confundir el culo con las témporas. [No need to confuse the ass with the temporal bones]. No confundir churras con merinas. [Don't confuse the sheep that produces itchy wool with the sheep that makes merino].

But at the moment, thinking of Rene González and Alan Gross, I prefer the Spanish no mezclar la velocidad con el tocino [don't mix up speed and bacon], because it’s an expression that highlights the absurd, and nothing is more absurd than the comparisons that are being marketed by the mainstream U.S. press on behalf of the State Department about these two men.

Take for example, the recent story by the Miami Herald‘s Jay Weaver. Upon learning of Judge Lenard’s decision to allow Rene González a two week respite from his probation, to visit his dying brother in Cuba, Weaver picked up the phone and performed what passes for journalism these days: punching the button that speed dials Maggie Khuly and asking for her opinion.

Khuly, for those who don’t know, is the brother of one of the men who – of their own free will – followed the blowhard José Basulto in donated Cessnas to test the limits of restricted Cuban airspace one time too many, on February 24, 1996. After ignoring verbal and physical warnings, two of the planes (tellingly, not Basulto’s which had long since slithered away) were shot down, one of which contained Khuly’s brother, and Khuly has been baying for blood ever since. Preferably Fidel Castro’s, but in his absence, and only for the time being, she’s accepted a proxy: five Cubans who had nothing whatsoever to do with the incident, as US Government prosecutors confessed to the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta. So who cares what Maggie Khuly thinks? The opinion of the average woman on the street might be more relevant.

Not only is González, unlike Gross, a free man after serving a ridiculous 13 year sentence while (in contravention of all international human rights accords) the US denied his wife a visa to visit him - it’s important to remember what González was actually convicted for.

He may have been the most hated of the Five – in Miami anyway – cracking the inner sanctum of the fundraising scheme known as Brothers to the Rescue, flying with Basulto, who knows, maybe even at some point with Khuly’s brother, but those are not indictable offenses. The only thing they could ultimately pin on Rene was the failure to register as an agent of a foreign government – the same thing that landed Anna Chapman on the cover of Russian Maxim.

That and being unrepentant. Despite the fact that unrepentance is also not a crime, there are still many ways to punish it, and Judge Lenard did her best to comply. Starting with an absurdly long sentence, and a probation that defies logic. Obama’s attorneys argued recently that González should not be allowed to see his dying brother, because Cuban intelligence might seize the opportunity to give him secret instructions to bring back to Miami when he returns to serve the rest of his probation before he finally leaves the US for good. Well? Deport him now then! Save us all!

But we can’t deport him, because he’s a US citizen by birth if not culture and rules are rules and anyway then we could no longer pretend that he and Gross, the man who solicited a half million dollar USAID contract (via DAI) to go and install the same kind of BGANs in Cuba that were no doubt useful in the humanitarian project known as Libya, are sort of the same. Because they both have close family members with cancer, you know. But the similarity begins and ends there. If you convict a person for failing to register as a foreign agent but you can’t show how his actions actually damaged the country he was operating in AS a foreign agent, then you’ve essentially caught someone on a technicality. Taking away 13+ years of a person’s life for a technicality is unconscionable and irreparable. Unlike González, Gross was convicted on quite a bit more than a technicality.

But that’s the problem with the US and Cuba. It’s always the same problem. Blind to our own defects, we see ourselves as giants. Cuba, like so many others, is seen as a toy country, with toy leaders, a toy language, toy people, toy laws. They can’t be serious! Even after it’s revealed that Gross himself actively solicited and designed the illegal subversive work he would carry out in Cuba, the State Department continues to peddle the line that he was somehow duped, “a trusting fool,” a “humanitarian.”

And so now we’re asked to believe that the two plus years of Gross’s confinement, complete with conjugal visits from his wife, are somehow comparable to 13 years stolen from a man who was prevented from seeing his wife at all…for a technicality? How many conjugal visits has Gerardo Hernández enjoyed since 2000? Fernando González? Zero. Not allowed in the US federal prison system. These men and their wives had not only their present stolen from them, but their future as well. Given their ages it’s increasingly likely that even if they are released through a presidential pardon, it’ll be too late for them to have children. Unconscionable. Irreparable.

Law & Media 101

Now that I’ve explained why it is a real, and offensive, manipulation to compare the cases of González and Gross, I will say this: Judy Gross still holds unique, if unrealized power. She has a forceful and sympathetic media at her disposal; something the Cuban Five and their families have never had. She could, if she understood how to exercise her power, stop the damage still being done to these five men and their families and simultaneously put an end to her personal nightmare. But not until she gets a better attorney, and not as long as she follows Hillary Clinton’s script.

The vigils outside the Cuban Interests Section in Washington? Amateur hour. But that seems to have been recognized. Now it’s time to move away from the script that focuses on one man, in this case, González, who is already virtually free, as the only possible trade for Gross, who comparatively speaking has served no time at all. In fact, could everyone please stop insulting our intelligence? Every Cuban I’ve ever met can do basic math. So can the pope.

I can imagine…it must be terrifying, thinking the State Department is your only hope, and if you step away from the script, what then? Well, there’s no need to re-invent the wheel. For one thing, there’s the resolution from the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detentions, which said that the sentence for all of the Cuban Five – Antonio Guerrero, Fernando González, Gerardo Hernández, Ramon Labañino and Rene González – is arbitrary and in violation of international law. Not just Rene. All of them.

Ask the State Department why that resolution is immaterial? Insist that they’ve got the math wrong – the correct multiple is five – why not? And when they say you can’t say that, you can’t do that, call Cindy Sheehan, another person who was ignored by a president, to his everlasting regret.

Or keep going on about speed and bacon. Your choice.

Rene González and Alan Gross: speed and bacon

I suppose the Latin American term for an apples and oranges comparison is peras y manzanas. [Pears and apples.] Somehow it doesn’t have quite the same ring. In Spain, the expressions are funnier. No hay que confundir el culo con las témporas. [No need to confuse the ass with the temporal bones]. No confundir churras con merinas. [Don't confuse the sheep that produces itchy wool with the sheep that makes merino].

But at the moment, thinking of Rene González and Alan Gross, I prefer the Spanish no mezclar la velocidad con el tocino [don't mix up speed and bacon], because it’s an expression that highlights the absurd, and nothing is more absurd than the comparisons that are being marketed by the mainstream U.S. press on behalf of the State Department about these two men.

Take for example, the recent story by the Miami Herald‘s Jay Weaver. Upon learning of Judge Lenard’s decision to allow Rene González a two week respite from his probation, to visit his dying brother in Cuba, Weaver picked up the phone and performed what passes for journalism these days: punching the button that speed dials Maggie Khuly and asking for her opinion.

Khuly, for those who don’t know, is the brother of one of the men who – of their own free will – followed the blowhard José Basulto in donated Cessnas to test the limits of restricted Cuban airspace one time too many, on February 24, 1996. After ignoring verbal and physical warnings, two of the planes (tellingly, not Basulto’s which had long since slithered away) were shot down, one of which contained Khuly’s brother, and Khuly has been baying for blood ever since. Preferably Fidel Castro’s, but in his absence, and only for the time being, she’s accepted a proxy: five Cubans who had nothing whatsoever to do with the incident, as US Government prosecutors confessed to the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta. So who cares what Maggie Khuly thinks? The opinion of the average woman on the street might be more relevant.

Not only is González, unlike Gross, a free man after serving a ridiculous 13 year sentence while (in contravention of all international human rights accords) the US denied his wife a visa to visit him - it’s important to remember what González was actually convicted for.

He may have been the most hated of the Five – in Miami anyway – cracking the inner sanctum of the fundraising scheme known as Brothers to the Rescue, flying with Basulto, who knows, maybe even at some point with Khuly’s brother, but those are not indictable offenses. The only thing they could ultimately pin on Rene was the failure to register as an agent of a foreign government – the same thing that landed Anna Chapman on the cover of Russian Maxim.

That and being unrepentant. Despite the fact that unrepentance is also not a crime, there are still many ways to punish it, and Judge Lenard did her best to comply. Starting with an absurdly long sentence, and a probation that defies logic. Obama’s attorneys argued recently that González should not be allowed to see his dying brother, because Cuban intelligence might seize the opportunity to give him secret instructions to bring back to Miami when he returns to serve the rest of his probation before he finally leaves the US for good. Well? Deport him now then! Save us all!

But we can’t deport him, because he’s a US citizen by birth if not culture and rules are rules and anyway then we could no longer pretend that he and Gross, the man who solicited a half million dollar USAID contract (via DAI) to go and install the same kind of BGANs in Cuba that were no doubt useful in the humanitarian project known as Libya, are sort of the same. Because they both have close family members with cancer, you know. But the similarity begins and ends there. If you convict a person for failing to register as a foreign agent but you can’t show how his actions actually damaged the country he was operating in AS a foreign agent, then you’ve essentially caught someone on a technicality. Taking away 13+ years of a person’s life for a technicality is unconscionable and irreparable. Unlike González, Gross was convicted on quite a bit more than a technicality.

But that’s the problem with the US and Cuba. It’s always the same problem. Blind to our own defects, we see ourselves as giants. Cuba, like so many others, is seen as a toy country, with toy leaders, a toy language, toy people, toy laws. They can’t be serious! Even after it’s revealed that Gross himself actively solicited and designed the illegal subversive work he would carry out in Cuba, the State Department continues to peddle the line that he was somehow duped, “a trusting fool,” a “humanitarian.”

And so now we’re asked to believe that the two plus years of Gross’s confinement, complete with conjugal visits from his wife, are somehow comparable to 13 years stolen from a man who was prevented from seeing his wife at all…for a technicality? How many conjugal visits has Gerardo Hernández enjoyed since 2000? Fernando González? Zero. Not allowed in the US federal prison system. These men and their wives had not only their present stolen from them, but their future as well. Given their ages it’s increasingly likely that even if they are released through a presidential pardon, it’ll be too late for them to have children. Unconscionable. Irreparable.

Law & Media 101

Now that I’ve explained why it is a real, and offensive, manipulation to compare the cases of González and Gross, I will say this: Judy Gross still holds unique, if unrealized power. She has a forceful and sympathetic media at her disposal; something the Cuban Five and their families have never had. She could, if she understood how to exercise her power, stop the damage still being done to these five men and their families and simultaneously put an end to her personal nightmare. But not until she gets a better attorney, and not as long as she follows Hillary Clinton’s script.

The vigils outside the Cuban Interests Section in Washington? Amateur hour. But that seems to have been recognized. Now it’s time to move away from the script that focuses on one man, in this case, González, who is already virtually free, as the only possible trade for Gross, who comparatively speaking has served no time at all. In fact, could everyone please stop insulting our intelligence? Every Cuban I’ve ever met can do basic math. So can the pope.

I can imagine…it must be terrifying, thinking the State Department is your only hope, and if you step away from the script, what then? Well, there’s no need to re-invent the wheel. For one thing, there’s the resolution from the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detentions, which said that the sentence for all of the Cuban Five – Antonio Guerrero, Fernando González, Gerardo Hernández, Ramon Labañino and Rene González – is arbitrary and in violation of international law. Not just Rene. All of them.

Ask the State Department why that resolution is immaterial? Insist that they’ve got the math wrong – the correct multiple is five – why not? And when they say you can’t say that, you can’t do that, call Cindy Sheehan, another person who was ignored by a president, to his everlasting regret.

Or keep going on about speed and bacon. Your choice.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

René González is granted permission to visit brother in Cuba


René González

In a massive victory for Miami Five campaign supporters, Rene Gonzalez has just received permission to travel to Cuba for two weeks to visit his critically ill brother Roberto in hospital.

The US Justice Department had opposed his request in a submission to the court last week. However, the court chose to grant permission Monday 19 March on the condition that he returns to the US to continue his parole with two weeks of his departure.

A huge thank you to everyone who took the campaign action and wrote the the US government urging that this permission be granted.

This is a great victory for campaigners for the Five all around the world, but we must continue and redouble our efforts until Rene and his four comrades are allowed to return home for good.

Read the full ruling from the court below:

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
CASE NO. 98-00721-CR-LENARD
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff,
v.
RENE GONZALEZ,
Defendant.

ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO TRAVEL (D.E. 1821)

THIS CAUSE is before the Court on Defendant Rene Gonzalez’s Motion to Travel (D.E. 1821), filed February 24, 2012. The United States filed its Response (D.E. 1822) on March 12, 2012.

Defendant filed his Reply (D.E. 1824) on March 15, 2012. Having reviewed the Motion, Response, Reply, related pleadings, and the record, the Court finds as follows. Defendant is currently serving a term of supervised release stemming from his convictions in the above-captioned matter. Defendant requests leave to travel to Cuba for two weeks in order to visit his brother, Roberto Gonzalez, who is in the terminal stages of lung and brain cancer.

In light of the circumstances, it is hereby ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that Defendant’s Motion to Travel (D.E. 1821) is GRANTED. Defendant may travel to Cuba to visit his brother, subject to the following conditions:

1.) Defendant must obtain all necessary permission, licenses, and/or clearance from the United States Government, including the Department of State and Department of the Treasury, separate and apart from this Order.

2.) Defendant shall submit to his probation officer a written, detailed itinerary of his travel, including flight numbers, routing, location, and contact information, as well as copies of all necessary clearances and licenses obtained from the United States Government.

3.) During his absence from the district of supervision, Defendant shall report telephonically to his probation officer as directed by his probation officer.

4.)The terms of Defendant’s supervised release shall remain otherwise unchanged, and Defendant must return to the United States and to the district of his supervised release within two weeks of departure.

DONE AND ORDERED in Chambers at Miami, Florida, this 19th day of March,
________________________________
JOAN A. LENARD UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

Read the original legal document Watch Rene's first interview in English following his release
Major Cuban art exhibition in support of the Miami Five comes to London and Glasgow

Monday, March 12, 2012

Call US Attorney General Eric Holder on behalf of Rene Gonzalez

Call U.S. Attorney Eric Holder to ask him to
Accept the Motion on Behalf of René González

Call or write to the U.S. Attorney General Eric
Holder demanding that he accept the motion
presented on behalf of René González so he is
allowed to travel to his country -Cuba- for 2
weeks to accompany his gravely ill brother and
his family. On October 7, Rene ended his unjust
sentence of 13 years but he has to remain in the
US for 3 more years under supervised probation.

Please, ACT NOW!

TO COMMUNICATE WITH THE U.S. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT

By e-mail

AskDOJ@usdoj.gov

By phone:

Office of the U.S. Attorney General Public Comment Line:
202-353-1555


By postal mail:
US Attorney General Eric Holder
U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20530-0001

Letter

of Rene Gonzalez to his brother Roberto