Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Wanted woman seen as symbol for U.S.-Cuban differences

Wanted woman seen as symbol for U.S.-Cuban differences
Michael Matza, Inquirer Staff Writer
LAST UPDATED: Monday, June 29, 2015, 1:07 AM

It was a murder on the New Jersey Turnpike - stunning violence near the
New Brunswick exit.

Now, decades after Black Liberation Army leader Joanne Chesimard was
sentenced for the 1973 killing of a state trooper, escaped prison, and
surfaced in Cuba in 1984, she is first and foremost among the estimated
70 American fugitives harbored there whose apparent flouting of U.S. law
is fuel for critics of recent efforts to restore U.S.-Cuba relations.

In December, 54 years after America severed diplomatic relations with
Cuba, Presidents Obama and Raul Castro proposed a renewal of ties.

"We view any changes in relations with Cuba as an opportunity to bring
[Chesimard] back," said New Jersey State Police Col. Rick Fuentes, "and
stand by the reward" for her capture.

Chesimard, 67, the lone woman on the FBI's list of "wanted terrorists,"
has a $2 million bounty on her head.

Convicted in the shooting death of New Jersey State Trooper Werner
Foerster, 34, during a traffic stop of a car in which she was a
passenger, Chesimard - who adopted the name Assata Shakur and happens to
be the aunt of slain rapper Tupac Shakur - is the poster child for
critics who say the State Department must insist on her extradition as a
condition of any fresh start with Cuba.

"It is a national disgrace that this president would even consider
normalizing relations while they are harboring a terrorist-murderer who
belongs in prison," Gov. Christie, an expected contender for the
Republican nomination for president, said at a recent town hall meeting
in New Hampshire.

In January, U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez (D., N.J.) wrote to Secretary of
State John Kerry demanding Shakur's repatriation for "deplorable crimes."

Resolutions of the New Jersey Assembly call for her extradition; the
state sheriff's association concurs.

Reviled by law enforcement and revered by Fidel Castro, who granted her
political asylum, Shakur embodies America's commitment to retrieve its
fugitives and Cuba's commitment to grant sanctuary to people it deems
persecuted dissidents.

"Cuba not only is refusing to hand her over; it is refusing, at least
publicly, to make the topic of extradition part of these negotiations,"
said Teishan Latner, a former fellow at New York University's Center for
the United States and the Cold War, where he researched the relationship
between Cuba and left wing groups in America for a forthcoming book.

Latner, who earned a master's degree in history from Temple University
and a doctorate in history from the University of California-Irvine,
currently is affiliated with the Center for Black Studies Research at
the University of California-Santa Barbara.

He met Shakur at a conference on Cuban health care during his first
visit to the island in 2004.

"Cuba considers her a folk hero who was persecuted by the U.S.
government," he said. Cuba's evidence of her alleged persecution, he
said: the absence of her fingerprints on the murder weapon; no residue
on her hands to indicate she fired a gun; and her trial by an all-white
jury.

Despite the half-century of severed relations, Cuba has cooperated on
some expulsions of fugitives wanted in America.

In September 2011, Cuba handed over to U.S. authorities Denis Catania,
49, and Diana Camacho, 26, both formerly of Voorhees, to face
kidnapping, murder, and arson charges in the death of Somerdale resident
Ross Heimlich, 23, whose charred body was found in a torched car in
Hammonton in 2010. The pair fled to Florida, then to various Caribbean
nations before landing in Cuba.

In 2013, Cuba handed over a Florida couple, Joshua and Sharyn Hakken,
who were wanted on charges that they had kidnapped their two young sons
from maternal grandparents who had custody. The Hakkens fled with the
children by sailboat to Havana.

Those examples are important, Latner said, because they show Cuba
distinguishes between ordinary criminal activity in which it cooperates
with U.S. law enforcement, and "cases where Cuba is motivated by
political principles" to grant asylum.

"It's not a blanket policy to aggravate American sensibilities," he
said. "In the case of Shakur, they characterize her as a civil rights
activist."

Critics contend that is a distortion of the case in which Foerster was
gunned down while providing backup for a trooper who had pulled over a
1965 Pontiac LeMans for a faulty taillight.

According to police, Shakur and two men in the car were armed. She fired
the first shot, was wounded and kept firing through an ensuing gun
battle until Foerster was dead and Trooper James Harper was wounded.
Also killed in the shootout: Shakur's brother-in-law, Zayd Malik Shakur.

Washington lawyer Douglas McNabb, an expert on international criminal
defense and extradition, said Shakur's safe haven in Cuba seems secure.

"While it is unfortunate that there were deaths, and she was able to
break out of prison and make her way to Cuba," the extradition treaty
between the U.S. and Cuba - signed in 1905, supplemented in 1926, and
still in force - unequivocally protects her, he said.

"One basis for the denial of extradition is political," McNabb said.
"Cuba determined her conviction was political."

"I can say [her extradition] is off the table," Gustavo Machin, the
deputy director for American affairs at the Cuban Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, told Yahoo News, according to a March report on the website the
Root.

Playing devil's advocate, McNabb speculated: "Could Cuba, as a sovereign
state, reverse its position and decide that having a relationship with
the U.S. is more important than not extraditing her? It certainly could."

Latner thinks that is highly unlikely.

"Granted, Cuba is in a state of flux, of change," he said, "but there is
no indication, based on any current or past actions, that it would
acquiesce on this issue.

"She is maligned in the law enforcement community, but in Cuba she is a
folk hero who stood up to antiblack state violence, triumphed, and got
away."

mmatza@phillynews.com

Source: Wanted woman seen as symbol for U.S.-Cuban differences -
http://www.philly.com/philly/news/20150629_Wanted_woman_seen_as_symbol_for_U_S_-Cuban_differences.html

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