As Rene Gonzalez and four others appeal their 2001 U.S. convictions this
week, kin and countrymen rally behind 'terrorism fighters'
By Michael Martinez | Tribune correspondent
August 19, 2007
HAVANA - One of Cuba's most celebrated spies was born in a flat along
Chicago's bustling Ashland Avenue in 1956.
Back then, Rene Gonzalez, now in a Florida prison cell, was just like
any other kid on the North Side, enjoying outings at the lake, Lincoln
Park Zoo and the bygone Riverview amusement park, his mother recalled in
an interview last week in Havana.
But after his parents returned home to Cuba in 1961 to join Fidel
Castro's young communist nation, Gonzalez grew up to become a Cuban
agent. He eventually worked in an intelligence ring called the Wasp
Network, which U.S. authorities accused of entering the U.S. and spying
on an American naval base in Key West and militant anti-Castro groups in
Miami -- with deadly results.
On Monday, Gonzalez and four imprisoned comrades will challenge their
2001 spying convictions in a federal appeals court in Atlanta. They will
argue that a prosecutor's arguments to the jury constituted misconduct,
that their convictions were based on insufficient evidence and that
their sentences exceeded federal guidelines.
In Cuba, the incarceration of the "Cuban 5" or "Los Cinco" -- Gonzalez,
Gerardo Hernandez, Ramon Labanino, Antonio Guerrero and Fernando
Gonzalez (no relation to Rene) -- is the focus of an enormous campaign
to portray the agents as national heroes suffering injustice on U.S.
soil. They are serving sentences ranging from 15 years to life.
In the state-controlled Cuban media, they are called "terrorism
fighters," not spies.
"They will return," say billboards adorned with photos of each one,
including Rene Gonzalez, looking like a casual professor with a
salt-and-pepper goatee.
"They were fighting for the [Cuban] revolution," contended Irma
Schwerert, Gonzalez's 69-year-old mother. "Undoubtedly, they are
political prisoners."
The five agents are lionized here for infiltrating Cuban-American groups
in South Florida that Cuban officials say were intent on terrorizing the
island in the 1990s, when tourism was reintroduced to replace lost
subsidies from the collapsed Soviet Union. Several Cuban tourism centers
were bombed during that decade. The Cuban government lodged a protest
with the U.S. over what it said were exiles financing the bombings.
"The crowd in Miami saw an opportunity to destroy the tourism industry
and bring Cuba to its knees," said Leonard Weinglass, a New York
attorney representing one of the five agents. "These five came in the
early-to-the-mid-'90s from Cuba when the United States didn't respond to
the [Cuban] protest."
One of the five agents held a civilian job at the Boca Chica Naval Air
Station in Key West, but the defendants contended they did not gather
secret U.S. defense information, only public data, Weinglass said.
Prosecutors dispute that claim.
All five were convicted of conspiring as unregistered Cuban agents to
spy on the U.S., and three were convicted of conspiracy to commit
espionage. The spy group had included five more members, but they
pleaded guilty in exchange for cooperation and were given reduced sentences.
Prosecutors accused Rene Gonzalez of faking defection back to the U.S.
in 1990, reclaiming his U.S. citizenship, and then working as a pilot
for two exile groups, including one called Brothers to the Rescue. He is
serving a 15-year sentence in a Marianna, Fla., prison.
Another of the agents, Hernandez, was convicted of murder conspiracy
relating to the deaths of four members of Brothers to the Rescue after
two of the group's U.S.-registered civilian planes were shot down by the
Cuban military in 1996.
The spy case highlights the enmity between Castro and Cuban-Americans in
Miami, as well as the hostility between Havana and Washington that
extends back to the unsuccessful U.S.-sponsored Bay of Pigs invasion
using Cuban exiles in 1961.
Cuban officials charge that the prosecution and sentencing of the five
men in a federal court in Miami was influenced by that community's
antipathy against Castro. Cuban officials also have condemned the United
States for what they deem as hypocrisy in fighting terrorism.
"These were persons who were in the United States monitoring Cuban
terrorist groups in Florida," Ricardo Alarcon, president of Cuba's
National Assembly, said in an interview last week.
Alarcon described the sentences as "excessive" when compared with those
of other convicted spies in the U.S. He cited a Chicago-area case in
which an alleged spy for Saddam Hussein, Khaled Abdel-Latif Dumeisi of
Oak Lawn, was sentenced to 46 months in 2004 for failing to register as
a foreign agent and committing conspiracy and perjury.
In court documents, U.S. prosecutors said the convictions against the
Cuban agents should stand.
"What the United States proved, overwhelmingly, is that the appellants
agreed and sought to communicate, deliver and transmit non-public
national defense information to Cuba, with reason to believe it would be
used to the injury of the United States or to the advantage of Cuba," R.
Alexander Acosta, the Miami-based U.S. attorney for South Florida, wrote
last December.
Back in Havana, Schwerert and other relatives of the agents often are
feted at state functions. In interviews, they have denounced the
sentences as unjust and politically motivated.
Schwerert, a retired union official, said her family used to live on the
1300 block of North Ashland Avenue, then a Polish neighborhood, and
eventually moved to northwest Indiana for better-paying jobs.
She still has a sister and a half-dozen other relatives in Chicago; her
mother, with whom she initially lived on the same Ashland block, now
lives in Sarasota, Fla. Schwerert and her husband were among a small
number of immigrants who returned to Cuba after Castro's 1959 takeover,
she said.
Schwerert, who recalled sending money from Chicago to support the
Castro-led revolution, now proudly notes that her son was born on the
same date as the Cuban leader, Aug. 13. Gonzalez, who attended
kindergarten in Indiana, was 5 years old when the family left that area
for Cuba, but his mother said he still can remember Chicago's parks and
cold winters.
"He was very friendly as a boy," said Schwerert, who has two other sons
besides her imprisoned eldest. "He learned the language very quickly."
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mjmartinez@tribune.com
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