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Supreme court refuses to hear Cuban 5 appeal

Published Jun 18, 2009 8:45 PM

The Supreme Court has confirmed the U.S. legal system’s ongoing hypocrisy in the treatment of the Cuban Five. The court on June 15 made public a list of what cases it will hear during its coming term—and the appeal of the Cuban Five was left off the list, with no explanation.

The Five–Gerardo Hernández, Ramón Labañino, Antonio Guerrero, Fernando González and René González–were falsely convicted of committing espionage conspiracy and other related charges. In reality, they were monitoring Miami-based groups known to have carried out terrorist attacks against Cuba. In fact, the reason they were arrested in the first place was that the Cuban government presented to the FBI some evidence they had collected, in hopes the U.S. would be compelled to stop the Miami-based terrorist groups. This led the Feds to the Five.

Free the Cuban 5!

One week before the Supreme Court refused to hear the appeal of the Cuban Five, a news conference outside the Federal Building in San Diego, Calif., demanded freedom for these five political prisoners unjustly held in the U.S. on trumped-up charges. Demanding freedom for the Five, who came to the U.S. to defend the Cuban people from terrorist attacks launched from Miami, speakers also brought up the government’s denial of family visits. Speakers represented Cuba Sí, the Raza Rights Coalition, the Free Mumia Coalition, Friends of Cuba, the Leonard Peltier Defense Committee, the International Action Center and Border Meetup. The Obama administration had filed a brief urging the court to deny the Five a hearing, which it did on June 15.
—Report and photo by Bob McCubbin

The lawyers for the Five presented strong arguments to the Supreme Court on why it should hear an appeal. Among the reasons cited were racial discrimination during jury selection and the right to a trial in a venue outside Miami, the heart of the right-wing Cuban-American community where so many anti-Cuban terrorist organizations operate.

Their position was further supported by 12 amicus curiae (friends of the court) briefs submitted by 10 Nobel prize recipients, with the endorsement of hundreds of parliamentarians and numerous U.S. and international jurist organizations.

Despite this groundswell of international support for the Five, and the fact that their trial was the only in the U.S. ever condemned by the U.N. Human Rights Commission, the court turned down the request for a hearing.

The court’s decision was met immediately by protests in cities across the U.S. and the world. There had even been demonstrations earlier, in anticipation of the court’s action.

It reminds us that the U.S. judicial system has a long history of meting out punishment, not justice. Without the presence of a grassroots movement, willing to struggle in the streets, the courts reinforce the violence of the state and reactionary elements of society.

If the courts, or any other branch of government, act in a progressive manner, it is always in response to pressure from below. That has been the consistent lesson of the women’s, civil rights, LGBT and labor movements.

We must remember these lessons as we continue to seek justice and freedom for the Five. The government didn’t want the court to hear the case because that would require the authorities to present their untenable position in a greater public forum than before. Merely hearing this case in the highest court of the U.S. would expose millions more to the hypocrisy of their own government.

Gerardo Hernández stated in 2008, on the heels of another legal setback at the 11th Circuit Court, that their freedom would be won only by the hard work of activists who continue to spread their story. He stated that “Our hopes are not placed in any court. Ten years are more than enough to have cured us of any such naïve notion.”