New Sentences for Ramón and Fernando
Dear Friends of the Cuban Five,
Today in a courtroom of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida packed with supporters of the Cuban Five including family members of Ramón Labañino and Fernando González, Ramón and Fernando were resentenced. Ramón received a 30-year sentence, reduced from life in prison. Fernando received a sentence of 17 years and 9 months, reduced from his original sentence of 19 years. Gloria La Riva, coordinator of the National Committee to Free the Cuban Five, said "Sisters and brothers, today in the courtroom, the dignity and courage of our brothers Fernando and Ramon was visible for all to see, as was that of Antonio when he was resentenced on Oct. 13. We commit ourselves more than ever to fight for the immediate freedom of the Cuban Five, and for the right of Olga Salanueva and Adriana Pérez to receive visas to visit their husbands Rene González and Gerardo Hernández." A new stage in the Cuban Five freedom fight has just begun. We urge Cuban Five supporters around the world to initiate new actions and continue the struggle with renewed vigor until the Five are free.
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Statement issued by Antonio Guerrero, Fernando González and Ramón Labañino
Dear Sisters and Brothers from Cuba and from all over the World:
We have already served more than 11 years in prison and there is still no justice at any level of the American legal system. Three of us have come to the Miami Court to be re-sentenced due to an order from the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, which determined that our sentences had been erroneously imposed. Our brother Gerardo Hernández, who is serving two life terms plus 15 years, has been arbitrarily excluded from this re-sentencing process. His situation remains the principal injustice in our case. The US Government is well aware of the falseness of the accusations against him and the unfairness of his sentence. This has been a complex process, difficult and much discussed in every detail, in which we participated along with our counsels. We did not give an inch in our principles, decorum and honor, always defending our innocence and the dignity of our Homeland. Just as it did at the moment of our arrest and at other occasions during these long years, the US Government proposes now that we collaborate to obtain more benevolent sentences. Once again, we have rejected such proposals, something that we never will accept under any circumstances. Present in the results of these re-sentencing hearings are the work of the legal team and the indestructible solidarity of all of you. It is significant that the US Government, for the first time in 11 years, was obliged to recognize that we did not cause any damage to its national security. Also, for the first time, the prosecutor publicly recognized the existence of a strong international movement in support of our immediate freedom, a movement that affects the image of the US judicial system in the eyes of the international community. Once again the absolute political character of this process is confirmed. We the Five are punished for accusations that never have been proved. Although three of our sentences were partially reduced, the injustice remains for all of us. The Cuban-American terrorists continue to enjoy total impunity. We reiterate: The Five are innocent! We feel profoundly moved and grateful for the permanent solidarity that you give us, so crucial in this long battle for justice. Together with you, we will continue until the final victory, which only will be reached with the return of the Five to our Homeland.
Antonio Guerrero Fernando González Ramón Labañino Miami, December 8, 2009
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News coverage
US judge cuts jails terms for two members of Cuban Five
Dec. 8, 2009 Reprinted from BBC
A US judge has reduced the jail terms of two Cuban men convicted of spying.Ramon Labanino and Fernando Gonzalez were part of the Cuban Five group, jailed in the US in 2001 for spying for the then government of Fidel Castro.Labanino's life sentence has been reduced to 30 years and Gonzalez's by one year to 18 years.The resentencing follows an appeals court ruling that the terms originally imposed were too harsh. A third man had his jail term reduced in October.Antonia Guerrero had his life sentence reduced to 22 years.Gonzalez had requested a greater drop in his sentence, said the Associated Press news agency.But US District Judge Joan Lenard said it was "important that foreign governments know that such activities are not tolerated in this country".'Unjust'The case has long been a cause of friction with Cuba, where the men, who have been in US custody since 1998 - are considered national heroes.Labanino, Gonzalez and Guerrero - along with Gerardo Hernandez and Rene Gonzalez - were found guilty in 2001 of infiltrating US military bases and Cuban exile groups, and giving the information to Cuba.Last year, an appeals court upheld their convictions but ordered three of the group to be resentenced.US prosecutors have insisted the men were found guilty on hard evidence, while Cuban exile groups say they were justly punished.The Cuban government says the men were not in Miami to spy on the US but to prevent anti-Castro exile groups from launching what it calls terrorist attacks on Cuba.Following Tuesday's hearing, the president of Cuba's National Assembly, Ricardo Alarcon, said the new sentences were "not without importance".But he said the jailing the men was still "unjust" and called on the US to release them.
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Cubans get reduced sentences for spying in US
by Curt Anderson,Dec. 8, 2009 Reprinted from AP
MIAMI — Two former Cuban intelligence officers convicted of spying in the U.S. were handed reduced prison sentences Tuesday after an appeals court ruled their original terms were too severe.U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard accepted an agreement reducing Ramon Labanino's term from life in prison to 30 years behind bars. At a separate hearing hours later, Lenard shaved a little more than a year off Fernando Gonzalez' 19-year sentence.The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals earlier this year had vacated sentences for the men, both 46, who were part of the so-called "Cuban Five" spy ring. A third member of the ring had his life sentence replaced earlier this year with a far lesser prison term.Labanino's attorneys' had worked out the new sentence with prosecutors. Assistant U.S. Attorney Caroline Heck Miller said the deal resulted in "a reasonable sentence."Gonzalez, though, had hoped for a greater reduction than what he got."It is important that foreign governments know that such activities are not tolerated in this country," Lenard said.The five men, who are lionized as heroes in Cuba, were convicted in 2001 of attempting to infiltrate military bases including Key West's Boca Chica Naval Air Station and the Miami-based Southern Command headquarters in the 1990s. Prosecutors said they also kept tabs on Cuban exiles opposed to the communist government of brothers Fidel and Raul Castro and sought to place operatives inside campaigns of anti-Castro politicians in the U.S.A key goal was getting inside Southern Command to obtain any U.S. plans for an invasion of Cuba, Miller said.One of the five, whose life sentence still stands, was convicted of murder conspiracy in the 1996 killings of four "Brothers to the Rescue" pilots whose planes were shot down by Cuban MiG fighters over the Florida Straits. The organization dropped pro-democracy leaflets on the island and helped Cuban migrants trying to reach the U.S.Labanino oversaw many of the Miami-based spy activities for Cuba's Directorate of Intelligence, according to court documents. He also took part in a plot known as "Operation Texaco" involving the theft of dozens of dead infants' identities to concoct fake documents such as passports and drivers licenses for other Cuban operatives.Lenard initially sentenced Labanino to the maximum life sentence for espionage conspiracy. But the appeals court ruled that was unjustified because no top secret U.S. information were obtained. The same legal reasoning led Lenard in October to reduce the sentence for 50-year-old Antonio Guerrero, who had spied from a job at the Key West Navy base, from life to 22 years.Gonzalez's 19-year sentence was thrown out because he was wrongly labeled as a supervisor of other spies in the group's attempts to obtain false identification and travel documents. But prosecutors said Gonzalez was a supervisor in other areas, such as the attempt to infiltrate the Southern Command, and had extensive spy training and multiple false identities including the Mexican "Ruben Campa" — a name stolen from a dead child.
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U.S. judge reduces Cuban spy's life jail sentence
Dec. 8, 2009MIAMI (Reuters) – A U.S. judge on Tuesday reduced the prison term for a Cuban spy from a life sentence to 30 years in a high-profile espionage case that has strained already hostile ties between Havana and Washington.U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard cut the sentence of Ramon Labanino, also known as Luis Medina, from a life term to 30 years, an assistant to the judge told Reuters.A second convicted spy, Fernando Gonzalez, also known as Ruben Campa, who is serving a 19-year term, was due to be resentenced later on Tuesday.U.S. prosecutors said both men were part of a Cuban espionage ring that had sought to penetrate U.S. military facilities and had spied on the Cuban exile community in Florida.The original sentences imposed by Lenard against Labanino and Gonzalez were thrown out as excessively harsh last year by a U.S. appeals court, which argued the Cuban agents had not succeeded in actually sending back top secret information, despite their conspiracy to do so.Labanino and Gonzalez were arrested in 1998 along with three other Cuban agents. Prosecutors said they formed the so-called "Wasp Network" sent to the United States to infiltrate exile groups opposed to Cuba's communist government, then led by Fidel Castro.Fidel Castro, now 83, handed over the Cuban presidency last year to his younger brother, Raul Castro, 78. U.S. President Barack Obama has said he wants to try to improve U.S.-Cuban ties after a half century of hostility.The case of the five spies has long been a point of contention between the United States and Cuba, which demands their release, hails them as heroes and says they were trying to prevent "terrorist" attacks by exile extremists.In October, one of the five, Antonio Guerrero, had his sentence reduced from life to about 22 years.(Reporting by Tom Brown and Pascal Fletcher; Editing by Anthony Boadle)
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Cuban spy gets life term reduced to 30 years
Dec. 8, 2009 MIAMI (AFP) – A judge Tuesday reduced from a life term to a 30-year sentence the punishment for a high-profile member of a Cuban spy ring that has long been a key dispute between communist Cuba and the United States.After an appeals court ruled that sentences against two of the five men were excessive, Ramon Labanino, who is also known as Luis Medina, struck a deal agreeing to a 30-year term, which was accepted by federal judge Joan Lenard.Labanino, 46, is one of the Cuban Five, who have become a cause celebre in their homeland, daily lauded by the government for what it calls their heroism in purportedly helping derail attacks against the communist isle.The United States says the five passed US military and other information illegally to Havana.Another member of the group, Fernando Gonzalez, was expected to have his 19- year sentence reduced Tuesday.The five men -- Gonzalez, Labanino, Antonio Guerrero, Gerardo Hernandez and Rene Gonzalez -- were arrested in 1998 and convicted three years later.In October, judge Lenard reduced Guerrero's sentence from life to 22 years in prison, but noted he had committed "very serious offences against the US."Cuba, which has acknowledged the men were agents but claims they were working to stop terrorist attacks on Cuban soil, regards the men as political prisoners and has lobbied intensely for their release.Cuban President Raul Castro has said he would be willing to swap jailed political dissidents for the five, but the US government has rejected the idea.
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Cuban spy's life sentence reduced to 30 years
by Jay Weaver,Dec. 8, 2009
A federal judge Tuesday reduced convicted Cuban spy Ramón Labañino's life sentence to 30 years in prison, based on an agreement between prosecutors and the defendant's attorney in the so-called Cuban Five espionage case.Labañino was originally sentenced to life by U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard after his espionage conspiracy conviction in 2001. But an appellate court overturned her sentence because Labañino didn't actually gather and send any classified materials to his handlers in Havana.Labañino was convicted of conspiring with four other Cuban government agents, as he oversaw efforts to infiltrate the U.S. Southern Command in Miami and the Boca Chica Naval Air Station in Key West. He also was convicted of stealing the identities of deceased U.S. citizens that he and the other agents used for their spy mission on behalf of the Castro government. Labañino's primary alias: Luis Medina.Last year, the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered Lenard to redo not only her sentence for Labañino, but also for convicted spy Fernando González. He got 19 years for acting as an unregistered agent of the Cuban government.Prosecutors recommended between 17 and 18 years for his resentencing, records show. His attorney argued for 15 years.The judge said she would issue her decision later Tuesday.Both men were indicted along with eight others as members of Cuba's "Wasp'' spy network, charged with conspiring to spy on the Cuban exile community, the U.S. Southern Command and the Boca Chica Naval Air Station.Five of the original defendants pleaded guilty. The others, known as the Cuban Five, faced trial and were convicted.While the appellate court upheld the five defendants' convictions, it threw out the sentences of Labañino, Gonzalez and one other spy, Antonio Guerrero. He initially received a life sentence. But in October, Lenard reduced his sentence to 22 years.The 11-year-old case has been mired in controversy because the Wasp spy network was linked to the Cuban government's 1996 shoot-down of two Brothers to the Rescue planes over international waters. Four pilots for Brothers to the Rescue, which flew missions searching for rafters in the Florida Straits, were killed.Family members of the victims said Tuesday that they supported the judge's decision to resentence Labañino to 30 years, but they also said the U.S. government should never consider a pardon for any of the Cuban Five."I don't want a pardon, and I don't want a [prisoner] exchange,'' said Maggie Khuly, sister of victim Armando Alejandre Jr.She added that she was pleased that the appellate court didn't overturn the life sentence of Gerardo Hernández, a leader of the Cuban spy mission, who was the only one convicted of murder conspiracy in the deaths of the Brothers pilots."I want him to serve his life sentence,'' said Khuly.Another family member, Mirta Mendez, brother of victim Carlos Costa, said the judge's 30 year sentence for Labañino was justice."It's a life sentence, if you think about it,'' said Mendez, who attended the sentencing with her parents. "By the time he gets out of prison, a good portion of his life will be gone. It's punishment. But no matter what happens, it won't bring my brother back.''Dozens of supporters for the Cuban Five said they saw the judge's reduction in Labañino's sentence as a step toward demanding a pardon for him."This is the best that could be expected today, but not one day of this imprisonment is just,'' said Gloria La Riva, coordinator for the San Francisco-based group, Free the Cuban Five.
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