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Lawyer:
Probation in the US Would be Additional Punishment for Rene
Gonzalez
HAVANA, Cuba, Sep 16 (acn) Phil
Horowitz, attorney for Rene Gonzalez, one of the five Cuban
antiterrorists unjustly incarcerated in the US, said it would be
“an additional three years of punishment” for Gonzalez to serve
his probation in American soil.
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Horowitz, in an article published by The
Washington Post, said his defendant wants to return to Cuba
immediately after his release from a federal prison in Marianna, Fla,
scheduled for next October 7th, but federal prosecutors insist he
must serve an additional three years of probation there.
He said he had asked U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard on humanitarian
grounds to permit the probation to be served in Cuba, since Gonzalez
doesn’t have any close relatives in the United States.
Horowitz noted that Gonzalez’s wife cannot get a visa to visit him
in the U.S and that his two children and parents also live in Cuba.
The US government said there was no legal justification for Gonzalez
to return before the three years’ probation is completed. In court
papers, they contend that Gonzalez was unrepentant regarding the
actions that landed him in prison and a return to Cuba would put him
beyond any U.S. supervision.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Caroline Heck Miller contended Horowitz´s
modification claiming that it seeks to eliminate the supervised
release even before it starts, and added the Cuban hero could later
request for permission to travel to Cuba.
Meanwhile, Irma Sehwerert, mother of Gonzalez, expressed concern
that her son might be in danger if forced to serve out probation in
the Miami area.
René González, along Gerardo Hernández, Ramón Labañino, Antonio
Guerrero and Fernando González were detained on September 12th,
1998, and were later tried and received harsh sentences for
infiltrating Miami-based anti-Cuba terrorist groups.
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