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Weinglass: "The Cuban Five probably have more support internationally
than any case that has come before the court."
By Bernie Dwyer
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Interview with Leonard Weinglass
New York
14th May 2009
As we near the May 28th, the date the US government will file its
papers opposing the Supreme Court taking the case of Gerardo Hernandez,
Ramon Labañino, Antonio Guerrero, Fernando Gonzalez and Rene Gonzalez,
known worldwide as the Cuban Five, Leonard Wineglass, representing Antonio
Guerrero and part of the defense team for the five Cubans, explains in
detail the legal process facing the legal team in the present political
climate in the US.
BD: Can you tell us the pertinent dates that we need to look out for
in the next step in the long drawn-out legal process involving the five
Cubans currently serving sentences in US prisons?
LW: Initially the government was to respond to our papers asking the (
US ) Supreme Court to take the case on May 6th. Then we heard from the
government a week ago and they asked for a third extension of time, which
is somewhat unusual, to May 28th which the court granted. The next date
is May 28th when the government files its papers in opposing the Supreme
Court taking the case. Then we have 10 days to file a reply and we now
anticipate a decision by the Supreme Court on
June 22nd. We are getting very close to end of courtâ?Ts term so
we will most likely hear from the court on that date, June 22nd. If we
do not, then the decision will probably go over until the Fall but we
anticipate hearing from the court on the 22nd of June.
BD: If they reply in the affirmative, how long do you think it might
be before the case is actually heard?
LW: The case would be then heard after briefs are filed and we would go
through another round of briefing in the early Fall. The case would probably
be heard in November.These are all surmises. Then we would be getting
the decision of the Supreme Court in January or February 2010.
BD: Apparently the US Supreme Court hears only about 2% of all cases
presented for review. Is that correct?
LW: It is actually slightly less than 2%. We are in a group of approx
2,000 cases that are asking the court to review the decision and of those
2,000 the court will probably take approximately seventy. And we are all
competing against each other to become one of the seventy cases.
BD: So these 2,000 cases are seeking reviews of decisions on cases
that have already been heard in the high court?
LW: They are seeking, in the main, to have a review of a decision by the
Circuit Court of Appeals. There are 12 circuits in the Unites States and
we are in the 11th. But each circuit issues a decision like the one we
got from the Atlanta court and then you have the right to request the
Supreme Court to review that decision, which is what we are doing. Also,
the Supreme Court also takes cases from the state court system which is
separate and apart, from the highest state court in each of the respective
states. So itsâ?T a mix; some are from the state court side and
some, like us, are from the federal court side.
BD: What sorts of cases go for review to the Supreme Court?
LW: All kinds of cases. Many are commercial, some are corporate, and some
involve decisions of the bureaucracy in the United States such as the
Environmental Protection Agency or the interior department. So you are
talking about a very diverse group of cases that involve issues of patent
rights, commercial and environmental issues. It´s a mix and a small
percentage of that number are criminal issues such as ours. A tiny number
are death penalty cases so they have a priority claim on the courts time.
So we are really pushed down into a very small percentage of the less
than 2% that come to the court seeking review.
BD: Are there other issues that can influence the Supreme Court here
in the US ?
LW: One of the other issues is the question of the Amicus briefs. The
amicus briefs are briefs that are filed by third parties who are not involved
in the litigation but who want to inform the court of their view
of the importance of the litigation in so far as it impacts on the US
or themselves. And of the 2000 cases, probably one or two hundred will
have an amicus brief filed. Usually there´re one or two. In an unusual
case, there might be three or possibly four. In our case we filed eleven
from international and domestic groups and associations, poet laureates,
lawyers and judges who feel the court should review this case because
of its international as well as its domestic implications. I can tell
you that of the 2000 cases, there are none with eleven amicus except us
and there are lawyers who observe the courts who are claiming that our
case has more amici (plural of amicus) than have ever been filed in any
other case. I am not sure of that but at least tha´s the thinking.
However I can assure you that of the 2000 cases we have more third parties,
particularly high profile international parties, expressing an interest
in our case than any other case.
BD: What kind of influence do you honestly think such high profile
parties can have?
LW: It´s very difficult to assess the strength of influence. It
might vary from judge to judge. There are some judges on that court who
have openly expressed their interest in international opinion. There are
other judges who disdain that interest. So it might impact some more than
others. But one thing I think we can say without question, without stressing
how strong the influence is, it does matter. It has at least some influence
and on certain judges more than others. So there is no negative here.
There is no downside, I believe. It does aid our case a great deal that
there are amici standing with us and saying, in effect, to the court that
the world is watching. And in the American justice system, the worst thing
that can happen to you is to be alone and the Five are certainly not alone.
They probably have more support internationally than any case that has
come before the court.
BD: Is there a fine line here where this could be seen as interference
with the judicial system of the United States ?
LW: The Amicus briefs that were filed were very aware of that problem
and no one is suggesting that they would wish to intrude on the prerogatives
of the American justice system; quite the opposite. So I think the modest
posture of these amicus briefs and the serious nature of the way they
are written will impress the court with the fact that no one is attempting
to politically or in any other way interfere with the court´s process.
They just wish to make known to the court that the international community
is, firstly, aware of this case and secondly, are concerned about its
potential impact if the court refuses to review the decision.
BD: Are these amicus briefs part of the actual court case itself?
Will they be heard during the hearing?
LW: They definitely become part of the official record. If the court accepts
the amicus, there will be an order issued accepting the amicus and we
anticipate the court will do that no matter what the outcome. So it does
become part of the record. Does it impact the decision-making process
aside from any influence. There are known instances, most recently in
some of the torture decisions, where there is an
acknowledgement of the international response to the court´s process.
BD: You mention eleven amicus briefs. Are the points being made all
the same or do they differ significantly?
LW: They do differ. Most of them address the question of the fundamental
issue of fair trial and whether or not the trial of five Cuban agents
in the Miami venue satisfies the international standards accepted in all
jurisdictions for a far trial. A lot of them address that issue and some
cite to the fact that a sub- committee of the UN Human Rights Commission
in May 200 after examining the record found that in this case the standard
was violated and that a fair tribunal was not available in the Miami district
to the five Cubans. Thatâ?Ts the focus on what I would say most
of the briefs that have been filed.
BD: A certain amount of optimism has being expressed by those in solidarity
with the Five that the new president of the United States seems to be
slowly making changes and moving in what looks like in a
different direction to his predecessor. Do you think there is a better
chance for justice for the Five under the Democrats and under Barack Obama?
LW: It´s very difficult to assess that issue. The next move by the
US government will be by the Solicitor General of the United States in
responding to our papers. We anticipate that the response of the US
government will be the same in the Obama administration as under the Bush
administration. They will resist, with all the powers that they have,
any question of the Supreme Court taking this case for review. We don´t
anticipate any change in that position. It will be wonderful if it happens
but the lawyers in this case, and some of them have more experience than
myself, do not anticipate that change.
Tom Goldstein, our chief counsel on the Supreme Court litigation, has
written to the Solicitor General pointing out that in deciding
the issue of the removal of African American jurors in this case, the
11th
Circuit court in Atlanta used the rule that no other court in the United
States has adopted, known as the rule which permits the government to
remove African American jurors just so long as there are still remaining
African Americans on the jury of twelve people and so long as the government
still has the power to remove those who remain but decides not to. Now
that´s technical but it´s called the â?~per seâ
rule.
Only in the 11th circuit which covers Georgia, Alabama, notorious Southern
states, as well as Florida, has that rule been applied and we have asked
through Tom Goldstein´s letter, for the Solicitor General to consider
the full impact of that rule and the fact that prosecutors under that
rule are given the green light in a court room in the United States to
exercise a bias, a prejudice, against an African American juror without
having to explain the reasons for doing so.
For those of us who practice in these courts, that is a major step backwards
and we question whether the United States wants to implement such a policy.
Clearly, such a policy would not be acceptable for job applicants, for
those seeking housing or those who want to vote. The question is, will
it be accepted in a court room, a federal court room of the United States.
We hope that there is now some new sensitivity in the Solicitor General´s
office that wasn´t there before. To allow such a process is unacceptable
and so after Tom Goldstein wrote that letter asking the Solicitor General,
who represents the United States, to reconsider that, the government came
back without a response but they asked for an extra two weeks to review
the case.
Some are feeling optimistic about that, frankly I am not. I think the
Solicitor General´s office, which is new, is organizing itself.
Even now as we speak the Solicitor General, Dean Elena Kagan is being
considered for the Supreme Court. That might add further to their internal
turmoil. But I think it is attributed to the fact that the Solicitor General´s
office is newly installed and needs more time to
organize itself. I hope I´m wrong and I hope it is that Dean Kagan
is considering the issue raised in Tom Goldstein´s letter but Tom
Goldstein doesn´t think that´s the process. He thinks that
it´s just the office needs more time.
BD: Obama now has a chance to appoint a new judge to Supreme Court
as a vacancy has arisen. Do you feel that he might take this opportunity
to put in somebody who might be progressive or is there such a thing as
a progressive Supreme Court judge in the US ?
LW: I don´t think there is such thing. For the first time in the
last hundred years, out of nine sitting justices, there is not one who
is opposed to capital punishment. We have always had one, sometimes we
have had two and I believe once even once in the 60´s, reflecting
the policy of the 60´s, we had three but this court has not even
one who is opposed to capital punishment as a matter of principle.
Well, the New York Times has recently warned the people of the United
States not to expect a liberal judge. That´s the word that´s
out in most media because Barack Obama, on issues of constitutional law,
may not be a liberal himself but is called a pragmatist, which is a gentle
word for conservative. So I´m not very hopeful. There are people
who have liberal credentials but who buy in to the National Security State
, and I think that might be the direction in which we are going. I might
say that
the departing justice, Justice Souter, a bachelor living on a farm in
a rural area of New Hampshire , is a man with liberal credentials but
he didn´t buy into the National Security State. He´s going
and it
could be that the one who replaces him, with perhaps liberal credentials,
does buy into the National Security State . This case of the five Cubans
impacts on the question of the National Security State so it is very hard
to be optimistic but like everyone I am waiting and watching but I really
don´t expect President Obama to reach across to a progressive and
possibly not even a liberal .
He has made it clear that he is not seeking an ideological choice which
is unfortunate because the right-wing justices are strongly ideological.
Unless there is a counter to their ideological stance, the right wing
sway of the court will continue so I´m waiting and watching but
I´m not optimistic.
BD: On what grounds do you think he will choose if he is not choosing
on ideological grounds?
LW: He refers to it as pragmatic. Someone, as he puts it, who understands
the temper and the mood of the American people. That is not the role of
the Supreme Court. The role of the Supreme Court is to be a bulwark against
the temper and attitudes of the American public and to protect the rights
of the minority and the powerless. So there seems to be confusion here.
We do not need a justice who reflects the mood of the American public.
The question is: should justice reflect attitudes in the community or
should justice reflect the fundamental rights of those who are minorities
and powerless in the community. I have always taken the position of the
latter and so have my brethren in the National Lawyers Guild. It´s
a fine line and I think it has to be understood because it is critical
to this process we are going through at the moment in the case of the
Cuban Five.
This interview was broadcast by Radio Havana Cuba´s
English department in three parts beginning on Wednesday 13th May 2009
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