Court upholds American's sentence in 1968 Cuba hijacking
A federal appeals court on Wednesday upheld the prison sentence of a man 
who turned himself in to authorities more than 40 years after 
participating in an airplane hijacking, but said he is a "worthy 
candidate" for a pardon.
Luis Armando Pena Soltren, a U.S. citizen, spent more than 40 years in 
Cuba as a fugitive after taking part in the 1968 hijacking of a Pan Am 
flight. He surrendered to U.S. authorities in 2009 and eventually 
pleaded guilty. In January 2011, Pena Soltren was sentenced to 15 years 
in prison.
On Wednesday, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York said 
that the lower court had properly taken all relevant factors into 
account when sentencing Pena Soltren. The judges, however, expressed 
some measure of sympathy for the defendant.
"There seems to be no reason to question his genuine remorse and his 
otherwise unblemished record of service to family and community," the 
decision said. "Pena Soltren is eligible for parole after five years. He 
is a worthy candidate for that relief, or for a pardon, notwithstanding 
that he can find no basis for relief in this court."
The U.S. Attorney's office in Manhattan, which prosecuted Pena Soltren, 
declined to comment.
Pena Soltren's lawyer, James Neuman, was not immediately available to 
comment.
The ruling marked the second time that the appeals court has weighed in 
on Pena Soltren's sentence. Last year, the court vacated his initial 
15-year sentence because it did not include the possibility of parole. 
The lower court judge, U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein in 
Manhattan, then resentenced him to 15 years and added the possibility of 
parole.
The hijacking took place on Nov. 11, 1968, when Pena Soltren, then 25, 
and two other men boarded Pan Am Flight 281 from New York to Puerto Rico.
After approximately an hour and a half, Pena Soltren used a knife and a 
gun to threaten a flight attendant and force the pilots to change course 
and fly to Cuba.
Dozens of planes were hijacked from the United States to Cuba during the 
Cold War as tensions with Cuban President Fidel Castro intensified. Some 
hijackers aimed to make political statements, while others sought asylum 
in Cuba or ransom payments from Washington.
The 2nd Circuit's ruling comes a week after a federal judge in Miami 
denied bail for a former Black Panther charged with hijacking a U.S. 
plane and forcing it to fly to Cuba in 1984.
William Potts, 56, returned to the United States from Cuba earlier this 
month to face charges stemming from his participation in the hijacking 
of a Piedmont Airlines flight. He was convicted in Cuba, where he spent 
a total of 16 years in prison before his release more than a decade ago.
Source: "Court upholds American's sentence in 1968 Cuba hijacking - U.S. 
News" - 
http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/11/27/21643371-court-upholds-americans-sentence-in-1968-cuba-hijacking
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