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Apr 26 2006
The Perfect Storm | Print |  E-mail
By Marjorie Cohn   
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The Perfect Storm
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    The panel characterized Posada as "a Cuban exile with a long history of violent acts against Cuba."

    In the face of this terrorism, the Cuban Five were gathering intelligence in Miami in order to prevent future terrorist acts against Cuba. Former high-ranking US military and security officials testified that Cuba posed no military threat to the United States. Although none of the five men had any classified material in their possession or engaged in any acts to injure the United States, and there was no evidence linking any of them to Cuba's shooting down of two small aircraft flown by Cuban exiles, the Cuban Five were nonetheless convicted of all charges.

    A survey conducted before trial showed that 69 percent of all respondents and 74 percent of Hispanic respondents were prejudiced against persons charged with engaging in the activities alleged in the indictment.

    Legal psychologist Dr. Kendra Brennan characterized the results of a poll of Miami Cuban-Americans as reflecting "an attitude of a state of war ... against Cuba" which had a "substantial impact on the rest of the Miami-Dade community." She found that 49.7 percent of the local Cuban population strongly favored direct US military action to overthrow the Castro regime.

    Dr. Lisandro Pérez, Director of the Cuban Research Institute, concluded that "the possibility of selecting twelve citizens of Miami-Dade County who can be impartial in a case involving acknowledged agents of the Cuban government is virtually zero ... even if the jury were composed entirely of non-Cubans, as it was in this case."

    One prospective juror stated that he "would feel a little bit intimidated and maybe a little fearful for my own safety if I didn't come back with a verdict that was in agreement with what the Cuban community [in Miami] feels, how they think the verdict should be."

    A banker and senior vice president in charge of housing loans was "concern[ed] how ... public opinion might affect [his] ability to do his job" which could "affect his ability to generate loans."

    David Buker stated he believed that "Castro is a communist dictator and I am opposed to communism so I would like to see him gone and a democracy established in Cuba." Buker became the foreperson of the jury.

    During deliberations, "some of the jurors indicated that they felt pressured." They "expressed concern that they were filmed 'all the way to their cars and [that] their license plates had been filmed,'" according to the panel's opinion.

    The change of venue motion occurred during the Elian Gonzalez matter. "It is uncontested," wrote the panel, "that the publicity concerning Elian Gonzalez continued during the trial, 'arousing and inflaming' passions within the Miami-Dade community." The panel noted "the various Cuban exile groups and their paramilitary camps that continue to operate within the Miami area." It concluded, "The perception that these groups could harm jurors that rendered a verdict unfavorable to their views was palpable."

The possibility of selecting twelve citizens of Miami-Dade County who can be impartial in a case involving acknowledged agents of the Cuban government is virtually zero ... even if the jury were composed entirely of non-Cubans, as it was in this case.
Dr. Lisandro Pérez,
Director of the Cuban Research Institute

The panel found: "Despite the district court's numerous efforts to ensure an impartial jury in this case, we find that empaneling such a jury in this community was an unreasonable probability because of pervasive community prejudice."

    Noted criminal defense attorney and long-time National Lawyers Guild member Leonard Weinglass represents Antonio Guerrero. Weinglass told me, "In seeking a review of the panel decision, the government has asked the en banc court to convert the finding of a 'perfect storm' of prejudice (reached unanimously after a 16-month scrupulous review of the record on venue) into a 'sunny day' of placid tolerance."

    The US government's 47-year economic blockade of Cuba was mirrored by the US media's blockade of press coverage of the trial. In spite of the avalanche of coverage in Miami, it was hardly mentioned in the national media.

    "It is inexplicable that the longest trial in the United States at the time it occurred, hearing scores of witnesses, including three retired generals and a retired admiral, as well as the President's Advisor on Cuban Affairs (all called by the defense) and a leading military expert from Cuba, all the while considering the dramatic and explosive 40-year history of US-Cuba relations, did not qualify for any media attention outside of Miami," Weinglass said.

    The Cuban Five were placed in solitary confinement for 17 months, in tiny cells where they could barely stand, until the start of their trial. Two have been denied visits from their wives for the last seven years in violation of US laws and international norms.

    Hopefully, the Court of Appeals will agree with its three-judge panel that the poisonous atmosphere surrounding the trial of the Cuban Five in Miami warrants a new trial.

=====================

Marjorie Cohn, a contributing editor to MWC News Magazine & t r u t h o u t, is a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, president-elect of the National Lawyers Guild, and the US representative to the executive committee of the American Association of Jurists.

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