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April, 1999


Solís sham conviction a wake-up call



by Gerard Emmett

"I will continue to struggle whether it be from behind a desk at the University of Puerto Rico or at home with my family, or whether it be from behind prison bars. I am a free man. They can't take that away from me."
   -José Solís

Chicago-In the most significant political trial in a long time, shock and outrage filled the courtroom here as a verdict of guilty on all counts was handed down March 12 against Prof. José Solís Jordán. He was convicted, in a travesty of justice, of conspiracy, of destruction and attempted destruction of government property, and of possession of illegal explosives. All this was allegedly part of a plan to bomb a military recruitment center here in 1992.

This trial had a number of farcical elements and moments, including the alleged motive for the bombing itself: to free Puerto Rican political prisoners. This was patently absurd, but the federal government did its best to stage-manage an atmosphere of clandestinity, tension, and implied potential violence. Solís supporters, mainly Puerto Rican youth who filled the courtroom benches for both weeks of the trial, were forced to undergo an extra, intrusive search of bags and pockets and pass through a second metal detector at the courtroom door.

TISSUE OF FBI LIES

Once inside, there was quite a political education to be had. Because there was no real physical evidence linking Prof. Solís to the bombing, the government's case against him depended upon the word of the FBI's paid informer, Rafael Marrero, and Marrero's friend and alleged accomplice, Eddie Brooks. Brooks claimed to have been a member of a secret organization along with Solís and Marrero, the Frente Revolucionario Boricua (FRB). But when asked, he couldn't remember what FRB stood for:"I don't know, fronterio something or other...Something about Puerto Rico."

When Brooks admitted that he had no real knowledge of who may have planted bombs, since he claimed to have dropped out of the group before anything happened, that left Marrero as the only real witness to anything. His testimony was a tissue of far-fetched tales about testing explosive devices on the Chicago lakefront and in Humboldt Park, both open, heavily trafficked areas. This was pretty funny, but it was not at all funny to hear that Marrero had been paid $119,000 by the FBI for his cooperation in various show trials directed against the Puerto Rican independence movement.

In the end, the government was left with arguing trivial points ("Where were you standing when you asked for a lawyer?") and relying upon the testimony of a handful of FBI agents who claimed that an unsigned "confession" had been dictated by Solís. Aside from this, the case was a pure effort to demonize the admitted politics of Prof. José Solís Jordán, a proud independentista, and anyone else who held such views.

ASSAILING CIVIL LIBERTIES

The FBI's use of paid informants should make anyone concerned with civil liberties take notice, and the attack on the Puerto Rican movement should make it of vital concern to all internationalists in the U.S. There was an astonishing lack of publicity, though, perhaps because the government knows that such travesties of justice are best performed in secrecy.

This wall of silence has to be broken down. The evening after the verdict came down there was a candlelight protest outside the Metropolitan Correctional Center where Prof. Solís is being held pending sentencing. The crowd of 200 chanted "José! José!" and were answered by the prisoners inside who knocked on their windows and, with blankets, flashed their lights on and off. It was a moment of human connection that needs to grow into a national consciousness of this case, which will be appealed on a number of grounds.



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