HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------
Note that this Miami Harold article wrongfully  and deliberately refers to Gonzalez
as a "spy". This is typical of the U.S propaganda media's misinformation and 
outright disinformation campaign regarding this case.
Gonzalez, by the Heralds own admission was not charged or convicted of "spying"
or "espionage". He was convicted merely of failing to register with the U.S state department as an agent of a foreign government!
mart
 
JUSTICE FOR THE MIAMI 5!
FREE THE CUBAN PATRIOTS!
JAIL THE GUSANO TERRORISTS!!
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, December 15, 2001 10:57 PM
Subject: [CubaNews] Miami 5: Rene Gonzalez Sentenced to 15 Years

Via NY Transfer News * All the News That Doesn't Fit

MIAMI 5: RENE GONZALEZ SENTENCED TO 15 YEARS

Miami Herald - December 15, 2001

by Gail Epstein Nieves

Pilot Rene Gonzalez, a U.S.-born Cuban spy who faked his defection
back to America and successfully insinuated himself into the highest
levels of Miami's anti-Castro movement, was sentenced Friday to the
maximum term of 15 years for functioning as an unregistered foreign
agent.

U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard said Gonzalez's crimes, coupled with
his lack of remorse and his unabashed loyalty to Cuba, meant that he
should serve two consecutive jail terms of five and 10 years. She
denied a defense motion to make the terms concurrent.

"This defendant stands before this court as an American citizen,"
Lenard said, differentiating Gonzalez, 45, from Gerardo Hernandez and
Ramon Labanino, two other Cuban spies she sentenced this week. Both
got life terms for espionage conspiracy.

But Gonzalez's reclamation of U.S. citizenship -- after a daring
defection in a stolen Cuban crop duster in 1990 -- was neither for
the pursuit of liberty nor happiness, Lenard said. "His purpose in
asserting his U.S. citizenship was to serve a different master," she
said.

In Miami, Gonzalez posed as an ardent anti-Castro activist at the
same time he was on Castro's payroll as an intelligence agent for La
Red Avispa, the Wasp Network.

He joined the inner circles of and flew planes for two key exile
groups -- Brothers to the Rescue and the Democracy Movement -- while
reporting back to Havana exhaustive details about both organizations
and working to foment internal dissent.

Philip Horowitz, Gonzalez's lawyer, had argued that Gonzalez was in
the United States to thwart exile-sponsored terror missions against
the island. Horowitz said the 15-year sentence was "undeserved" and
would be appealed.

He said Gonzalez will be eligible for release in about 9 1/2 years
because he's already served three years since his arrest.

Gonzalez was among five Cuban agents convicted in June after a
six-month trial. The men tried to penetrate U.S. military bases and
exile groups.

Gonzalez was so convincing in his patriotic fervor that even after
his arrest three years ago, exile leaders hesitated to believe that
their cocky, sharp-tongued friend was indeed a Cuban spy in their
midst.

"I'm shocked," Democracy Movement founder Ramon Saul Sanchez said at
the time. "I find it hard to say bad things about him."

There was no shortage of criticism about Gonzalez on Friday, however.

"Today I am thanking God because the judge gave him the maximum,"
said Mercy Garcia, whose husband, Marcelino, is a coordinator of the
Democracy Movement.

"He came to my home, he was like part of my family. But he is a
traitor of the honor that a man should have."

Like the spies sentenced earlier, Gonzalez delivered a defiant speech
in court, but his tone had a sharper edge. He attacked prosecutors as
"hypocrites" for going after Cuban agents but not militant exiles. He
also said he enjoyed seeing the prosecutors "squirm" in court.

The judge told Gonzalez that his "personal political beliefs do not
justify his criminal conduct." She said, "The terrorist acts by
others cannot excuse the wrongful or illegal acts by this defendant
or any other."

Brothers founder Jose Basulto, once a close friend, said Gonzalez's
speech told him all he needed to know about the man he once trusted.
"I wanted to see what was inside of him, and he provided us with an
X-ray of his feelings: hate and resentment," Basulto said. "If there
was any doubt he deserved the maximum, he confirmed it to the judge
with his own words."

"He's the kind of soldier unquestioning of the authority above him,
and that's what makes him so dangerous," said John Kastrenakes, who
prosecuted the case with Caroline Heck Miller and David Buckner.

After the judge ruled, Gonzalez patted his attorney's back, gave a
thumbs-up sign to his mother, crying teenage daughter Irmita and
brother, and shook hands with two other Cuban agents who face
sentencing later this month.

All the relatives traveled from Cuba for the proceedings. They
declined to comment.

Evidence at trial showed that Gonzalez was tasked with numerous
"active measures," the term used by Cuban intelligence for, among
other things, offensive tactics against the exile community. They
included letters and phone calls that spread scandalous
misinformation or threats.

The measures were designed to create internal dissent or to discredit
the image of exile groups. Targets included Sanchez and the Democracy
Movement, the Cuban American National Foundation and other
anti-Castro groups.

At Gonzalez's request, U.S. Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Miami, wrote
a routine letter to facilitate his wife's entry from Cuba into the
United States. But he never told her he was a Cuban agent.

Nor did Gonzalez offer that information when he met in the fall of
1996 with FBI Agent Albert Alonso of Miami, who tried to recruit
Gonzalez as an informant.

"I thwarted him diplomatically, but I left the door open a crack. I
think that I was very convincing and my 'sincerity' impressed him,"
Gonzalez wrote in a report to his bosses.

Copyright (c) 2001 Miami Herald

[In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is
distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior
interest in receiving the included information for research and
educational purposes. For more information see:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml ]

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