https://nacla.org/blog/2013/8/22/chiquita-playing-victim-card-latest-legal-battle
Chiquita Playing the Victim Card in Latest Legal Battle
Kevin Edmonds <https://nacla.org/nacla-bloggers#Kevin>
The Other Side of Paradise <https://nacla.org/node/7887>
August 22, 2013
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In 2007, Chiquita Brands International admitted to making
payments<http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2007/March/07_nsd_161.html> to
an array of Colombian paramilitary and guerilla groups over the past ten
years in exchange for a paltry fine of $25 million.  One group in
particular, the Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia (United Self-Defense Forces
of Colombia) or the AUC was designated as a foreign terrorist
organization<http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2007/March/07_nsd_161.html>
in
2001 – and one of the primary recipients of the payments.  Claiming no
wrongdoing Chiquita argued that <http://www2.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/colombia/> it
was being extorted and that it had never received "any actual security
services or actual security equipment in exchange for the payments."

At the time of the initial sentencing Assistant Attorney General Kenneth L.
Wainstein remarked<http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2007/March/07_nsd_161.html>,
in a seemingly straightforward manner, that "Like any criminal enterprise,
a terrorist organization needs a funding stream to support its operations.
 For several years, the AUC terrorist group found one in the payments they
demanded from Chiquita Brands International.  Thanks to Chiquita's
cooperation and this prosecution, that funding stream is now dry and
corporations are on notice that they cannot make protection payments to
terrorists."

It now appears that things are not as simple as Assistant Attorney General
Wainstein initially thought.  In April, Chiquita Brands International filed
a reverse Freedom of Information Act
lawsuit<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-04-04/chiquita-brands-sues-sec-to-probe-documents-release.html>
to
stop the public release of thousands of documents handed over to the
Security and Exchange Commission.  The documents are said to outline in
detail Chiquita’s illegal payments to terrorist organizations such as the
AUC.

Despite the clear and existing evidence that Chiquita had engaged in
criminal activity, Chiquita is arguing that under Exception 7(B) of the
Freedom of Information
Act<http://www2.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/news/20130408/docs/Docket%201%20-%20Complaint.pdf>,
mandatory disclosure provisions do not apply to “records or information
compiled for law enforcement purposes . . . to the extent that the
production of such law enforcement records or information . . . would
deprive a person of a right to a fair trial or an impartial adjudication.”

In an effort to portray the multinational corporation as the real victim in
this case Chiquita’s lawyer, James Garland, argued
that<http://www2.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/news/20130408/docs/Docket%201%20-%20Complaint.pdf>
the
disclosure of the documents “will make them available to the general
public, including members of the press and individuals and organizations
that seek to distort the facts surrounding the payments that Banadex (a
subsidiary of Chiquita) made to the AUC under threat of force.  Past
experience with release of Chiquita’s documents has demonstrated that media
campaigns based on gross mischaracterizations of released documents are
certain to occur in an effort to entrench misconceptions of relevant facts
in the minds of fact finders integral to the fairness of the proceedings.”

Furthermore, Garland has engaged in a campaign alleging that the National
Security Archive is not an independent research organization, but instead
is seeking to assist lawyers involved in a class action
lawsuit<http://www.earthrights.org/legal/doe-v-chiquita-brands-international>against
Chiquita in Colombia, on behalf of the victims of paramilitaries, in
addition to an ongoing criminal investigation of former Chiquita employees
in Colombia.  The fact that the National Security Archive would not have
found evidence of criminal wrongdoing if it had never happened in the first
place seems lost on Garland.

However, this illogical line of argument is not baseless – as in 1997
Chiquita managed to overturn a brilliantinvestigation by the Cincinnati
Enquirer<http://nacla.org/blog/2013/7/4/revisiting-cincinnati-enquirer-vs-chiquita>
on
the basis of the “illegitimate” gathering of evidence.  The investigation
uncovered that Chiquita was engaging in widespread murder, bribery, arms
trafficking, and knowingly poisoning the environment throughout Latin
America, but the charges were thrown out.  The newspaper was sued and the
journalists had their careers cut short.

In 2007, ten years after the Cincinnati Enquirer investigation, the first
batch of over five thousand documents, known as the “Chiquita
Papers<http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB340/>”
were published and made available to the public by the National Security
Archive.  The documents were released by the Justice Department and the FBI
in response to the National Security Archive’s Freedom of Information
requests.

Michael Evans, Director of the Colombia Project at the National Security
Archives remarked on the importance of the documents, stating that “This
may well be the most important collection of records ever assembled on
corporate ties to terrorism. This was a massive, years-long investigation
that involved multiple federal agencies and resulted in the one of the
first convictions of a major US company of financing a terrorist group.”

Despite Chiquita’s posturing, the most likely reason they are demanding
that the additional documents be supressed is because it would provide
further the evidence of criminal wrongdoing in Colombia. Based on the first
batch of documents, Evans highlighted that “we found very strong
indications that Chiquita did, in some cases, receive something in return
for their illicit payments – that there was a quid pro quo with both
guerrilla and paramilitary groups.  The evidence we found directly
contradicted the U.S. Attorney’s finding, stated in the sentencing
memorandum, that the company had never received "any actual security
services or actual security equipment in exchange for the payments.  For
instance, a legal memo written by one of Chiquita’s lawyers said that the
general manager of Chiquita operations in Turbó, Colombia, had told him
“that the Guerrilla Groups are used to supply security personnel at the
various farms."  It’s right there in a Chiquita legal memo written on
Chiquita letterhead.”

Upon closer examination of the Chiquita Papers, it became clear that the
Attorney General failed to read or truly understand what evidence were
contained in the documents, with Evans adding that “Another document that
we published in 2011 shows that Chiquita also paid right-wing paramilitary
forces for security services.  The March 2000 memo, again, written on
Chiquita letterhead and based on a conversation with one of the managers in
Colombia, says that a group known to be a front for paramilitary terrorists
was formed to disguise “the real purpose of providing security” and that
the “money [was] for info[rmation] on guerrilla movements.”  The company
manager also suggested that they “should continue making the payments,”
because the company would not “get the same level of support from the
military.”

It will be telling how much information is released to the public, as
Chiquita Brands International has some friends in very high places.  During
the 2007 investigation in which Chiquita was fined $25 million, the company
was represented by current Attorney General Eric Holder.

In effect, the current reverse Freedom of Information lawsuit amounts to
Chiquita asking the United States District Court for the District of
Colombia to hide documents which can potentially reveal the corporation’s
involvement in criminal activities which have resulted in the death and
assault of thousands of
Colombians<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dan-kovalik/lawyer-for-chiquita-in-co_b_141919.html>.
 The fact that the U.S. Department of Justice produced such a small penalty
despite the evidence of criminal wrongdoing in 2007 should be disconcerning
to all interested in human rights, as it is further evidence of the abuses
of corporate political power.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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