ON
Wednesday, June 4, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in
Atlanta issued its decision on the appeal submitted by the
defense.
In a
99-page ruling, and by unanimous decision, the three judges
upheld the guilty verdicts against the five Cuban patriots
and annulled the sentences of three of them, who must be
re-sentenced.
They
ratified the sentences of René González (15 years in prison)
and Gerardo Hernández (two life sentences plus 15 years).
The
decision on Gerardo’s sentence was 2-1, not unanimous. Judge
Kravitch said in a 16-page statement that the government
failed to provide sufficient evidence to charge Gerardo with
conspiracy to commit murder.
The
cases of Ramón Labañino (life imprisonment plus 18 years),
Fernando González (19 years) and Antonio Guerrero (life
imprisonment plus 10 years) were sent back to federal court
Judge Joan Lenard in Florida for re-sentencing.
Lenard must hold a new hearing to issue that ruling. This is
the same judge who imposed the onerous and unjust sentences
on the Five in 2001.
The
Atlanta court ruled that the arguments of the defense lacked
merit. The use of political terms in the court’s ruling is
stunning; it is a far cry from legal institutions and it is
pro-government.
The
judges’ decision leaves open several contradictions between
the opinions of two of them and the statement written and
signed by Judge Pryor, an extremely conservative judge who
was appointed thanks to the current Republican presidential
candidate, McCain, despite Senate opposition.
Defense attorneys Weinglass, MacKenna and Horowitz said they
would continue the legal battle begun in December 2001, when
the Five were unjustly sentenced. Legally, there are roads
to follow.
Beyond the all of the legal tricks used by the U.S.
government to prolong the unjust imprisonment of our five
brothers, this court ruling is not surprising; on the
contrary, it reaffirms for us even more the need to continue
fighting tirelessly to expose this colossal injustice.
Once
more, the cynicism of the U.S. government has been laid
bare; on that same day, in another U.S. city, it continued
with its farce to protect the criminal Luis Posada Carriles,
who is enjoying total freedom, instead of classifying him as
a terrorist for his crimes against humanity and extraditing
him to Venezuela, whose government has been asking for that
for three years, given that he is a fugitive of that
country’s justice system.
For
Gerardo, the ruling is not surprising. "This is the same
justice system that has kept Mumia, Leonard Peltier and the
Puerto Rican political prisoners incarcerated for more than
20 years," he told us this morning. "We’ll do all the time
we have to do, 30 years, 40, whatever, and as long as a
single one of you is outside resisting, we are also going to
resist, until justice is done."
Gerardo asked us to transmit all of his confidence. "Tell
everyone who asks that I am fine and feeling strong, and to
keep up the fight."
Together with our friends, committees and brothers and
sisters of the world, we call for redoubling the demand for
freedom for the Five, to mobilize starting tomorrow, June 6,
in every way possible, as we will do in the United States,
Europe and Latin America, in front of the offices of the
terrorist government of the United States, which is keeping
our five brothers in prison.
Only
solidarity, constant denunciation and international
mobilization will achieve freedom for the Five.
International Committee to Free the Five
Granma 06-06-2008