for photos of the prisoners |
Who they are:
Those who accepted clemency offer and are eligible for immediate
release:
- Edwin Cortés, 44, 35-year sentence.
- Elizam Escobar, 51, 60-year sentence.
- Ricardo Jimenez, 43, 90-year sentence.
- Adolfo Matos, 48, 70-year sentence.
- Dylcia Pagan, 52, 55-year sentence.
- Alberto Rodríguez, 46, 35-year sentence.
- Alicia Rodríguez, 44, 85-year sentence.
- Ida Luz Rodríguez, 49, 75-year sentence.
- Luis Rosa, 39, 105-year sentence.
- Alejandrina Torres, 60, 35-year sentence.
- Carmen Valentín, 53, 90-year sentence.
Accepted clemency offer
but must serve another five years:
- Juan Segarra Palmer, 49, 55-year sentence.
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WASHINGTON -- The White House announced Tuesday afternoon
that 12 jailed members of a Puerto Rican nationalist group had
accepted President Clinton's conditional offer of clemency. Eleven
will be eligible for release within days, while the 12th had
his 55-year sentence drastically reduced and will be paroled
in five years.
Ten of the 12 have decided to move to Puerto Rico when they
are released, although many of them have not lived here since
they were children. The other two will join relatives in Chicago,
where most were living when they were arrested in the early 1980s.
The 12 were part of the Armed Forces of National Liberation
(the FALN, in Spanish), which set off more than 100 bombs in
New York and Chicago in the 1970s and early 1980s to press for
Puerto Rican independence from the United States. Though at least
six people were killed and scores more wounded in those attacks,
none of those offered clemency was convicted of a specific deadly
or injurious act. They were convicted of weapons possession and
seditious conspiracy.
The conditions of their parole include that they commit no
further crimes and that they limit their association with other
Puerto Rican nationalists who advocate violence.
Two other jailed members of the radical group, known as F.A.L.N.,
the Spanish initials for the Armed Forces of National Liberation,
refused to accept the President's offer to commute their sentences.
Clinton demanded as one of the conditions of their release that
the jailed Puerto Ricans renounce the use of terrorism to achieve
their aim of independence for the Caribbean commonwealth.
Roberto Maldonado-Rivera and Norman Ramírez-Talavera,
who both were released from prison several years ago after serving
their sentences in a 1983 armored car robbery in West Hartford,
Conn., have not replied to the clemency offer and have until
Friday to do so. The clemency offer would forgive the unpaid
balance on fines imposed on them in the case.
Clinton's Aug. 11 clemency offer applied to 16 FALN members
and is set to expire Friday, has mushroomed into a contentious
political issue, in part because of his wife's prospective Senate
campaign in New York next year.
Opponents of the clemency, especially law enforcement personnel
injured in FALN attacks, criticized Clinton for sending a signal
of leniency toward terrorism and of trying to gain support for
his wife among members of New York's Puerto Rican community.
But supporters of the clemencies, including former president
Jimmy Carter and South African Nobel laureate Desmond Tutu, have
framed the issue in human rights terms and argued that the FALN
members' sentences were disproportionate to their crimes. The
prisoners received sentences of between 35 and 90 years; more
than drug dealers, for instance, or even convicted murderers.
Most have already served 19 years.
"This is not about who will be the next senator in New
York," Jan Susler, attorney for the detainees, said at a
Chicago news conference. "These people went to prison for
the same thing that Nelson Mandela went to prison for,"
she said, referring to the decades of imprisonment that preceded
Mandela's elevation as South Africa's first democratically elected
president.
"I think it is a tremendous victory and accomplishment
for the Puerto Rican people and people who love justice,"
Ms. Susler said. But she and another lawyer for the F.A.L.N.
members, Michael Deutsch, added that they were concerned that
after their release the nationalists would be subjected to harassment
by law-enforcement officials and denied the right to peaceable
political activity.
The lawyers said they planned to create a network of monitors
in the United States and Puerto Rico to assure that the freed
prisoners' rights are not abridged.
The two nationalists who rejected the President's grant of
clemency and who will remain in prison are Oscar Lopez-Rivera
and Antonio Camacho-Negrón.
Lopez Rivera was convicted in Chicago in August 1981 of numerous
charges, including weapons violations and conspiracy to transport
explosives with intent to destroy Government property, and sentenced
to 70 years in prison. Clinton had offered to reduce his sentence.
Camacho-Negrón was convicted in Connecticut in June
1989 of conspiracy to rob a bank and foreign transportation of
stolen money. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison. Camacho-Negrón
had been released on parole but was returned to prison in February
1998 for associating with people active in the independence movement
and becoming involved again himself.
Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton came under continuing criticism
from Latino leaders in New York over her announcement Saturday
that she opposed her husband's clemency offer. Her position put
her on the same side as New York City Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani
(R), her likely rival in the Senate race, and sparked an uproar
in the politically potent Hispanic community.
Mrs. Clinton called the offer a "mistake" and said
the absence of a response from the prisoners, especially on the
renunciation of violence, "speaks volumes." (A press
release dated Sept. 2 and issued by the detainees' lawyer said
they had indeed agreed to renounce violence.)
Mrs. Clinton's move came a day after White House lawyers had
set the Sept. 10 deadline for the FALN to respond.
Latino leaders here expressed outrage at Mrs. Clinton's stand,
calling it premature and suggesting she took it to counter claims
that the administration was pandering to their community. On
Labor Day, she tried to assuage their concerns through strategic
telephone calls, but that did not appear to lessen the outrage.
Both Fernando Ferrer, the Bronx borough president, and Rep.
Nydia M. Velazquez (D-N.Y.), confirmed today that they spoke
to Mrs. Clinton Monday. Neither, however, would characterize
her side of the conversation. But Ferrer said, "I told her
she made a huge mistake."
Rep. Jose E. Serrano (D-N.Y.), who threatened over the weekend
to withhold his campaign support from Clinton and reaffirmed
that statement today, said he received no phone call Monday.
"They are not calling me," he said.
At a Manhattan news conference, Serrano, Velazquez, Ferrer
and 11 other Latino elected officials criticized Mrs. Clinton
for playing politics with an issue that is near and dear to Latino
politicians and should have been beyond political point-scoring.
All of these leaders are Democrats and would be hard-pressed
to support Giuliani's Senate campaign. But they made their displeasure
at Mrs. Clinton well known nonetheless.
"Our issue is we are supporting the release," Rep.
Carmen Arroyo, a New York State Assembly member, said as emotion
rose in her voice. "We are commending the president. Who
cares about Hillary Clinton now?"
"Or for that matter, Rudolph Giuliani," said Ferrer.
"We want to see the prisoners free," Arroyo said.
Despite this political dust-up, Howard Wolfson, a spokesman
for Mrs. Clinton's exploratory Senate committee, characterized
the angered Latino leaders as "friends" of Mrs. Clinton's.
Hillary Clinton understands that her friends feel very strongly
about this issue," Wolfson said. "But she stands by
her [Saturday] statement."
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