Cuba trial of U.S. contractor ends but no verdict yet
[image: Photo]
7:08pm EST

By Jeff Franks

HAVANA (Reuters) - The trial of U.S. aid contractor Alan Gross for crimes
against the Cuban state ended on Saturday after two days of testimony, but
judges were still mulling the verdict, a U.S. official said.

Gross, 61, faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted for his work in a
U.S. program to increase opposition to Cuba's one-party government.

"The trial was concluded, but a verdict was not announced," said a U.S.
spokeswoman in Havana.

She said Gross' Cuban lawyer, Nuris Pinera, would be notified when the
five-judge panel makes its decision, "but we have no timeline" when that
will happen.

Cuba says Gross was distributing Internet equipment, including sophisticated
satellite phones, to dissidents, in violation of Cuban law.

He is officially charged with "acts against the independence and territorial
integrity of the state."

The case halted a brief warming in U.S.-Cuban relations and could do lasting
damage if Gross is imprisoned for long.

He has been an active participant in his case, making what the Cuban
government described on Friday as a "free declaration" and mounting what his
U.S. attorney called a "vigorous defense."

If convicted, Gross, who appeared gaunt in a business suit on Saturday, can
appeal the decision to Cuba's highest court. Wife Judy Gross said he has
lost 90 pounds (41 kg) in jail.

The longtime development worker was in Cuba on a tourist visa working in a
controversial U.S. Agency for International Development program aimed at
promoting political change on the island. He was arrested December 3, 2009
in a Havana hotel and has been in jail since.

The United States, at loggerheads with Cuba for more than five decades, said
he helped provide Internet service to Jewish groups but committed no crimes.

SABOTAGE

Cuban leaders view Gross' work as more of long-standing U.S. efforts to
sabotage the communist government put in place after Fidel Castro rose to
power in a 1959 revolution.

In a recently leaked video of a Ministry of Interior briefing, an Internet
expert equated Gross to the "mercenaries" who took part in the 1961
U.S.-backed and unsuccessful invasion attempt at the Bay of Pigs.

Internet access is limited in Cuba but the expert said the Internet is the
latest front in the long ideological war between the two countries.

The U.S. programs have been criticized in the United States for doing little
more than provoking the Cuban government.

Cuba was expected to use the trial to put a spotlight on U.S. activities on
the island, but has excluded foreign press from covering it and made no
mention of it on Saturday in the official newspaper Granma.


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