Wednesday, February 2, 2011
Afiuni Released under House Arrest
Justice Afiuni's health has been deteriorating following fourteen months detention at the Prison for Women. Because of her status as a Criminal Court Judge, who had sentenced several inmates, her life had been threatened, and she was kept in an isolation cell for the whole time.
While the details of her medical status have been declared secret by the Judge presiding over her case, it is thought that an absolute inability to walk or exercise other than within a three by four meter cell, was a contributing factor to this deterioration.
It is expected that she will be seen at a hospital within hours of her release.
Thursday, December 9, 2010
December 10th, 2010
Venezuela's Case Against Afiuni Falls Apart
SUMMARY OF AFIUNI CASE AFTER ONE YEAR PRETRIAL CUSTODY
Justice Maria Lourdes Afiuni remains in custody at the prison for women in Caracas, Venezuela. She was charged with "corruption" and "assisting in an escape" because, while a sitting judge, she granted an accused bail to await his trial on criminal charges. That person, one Cedeno, had been in custody for 34 months awaiting trial. The Constitution of Venezuela stipulates that no person be detained before trial for a period longer than two years.
In Cedeno's case, trial dates had repeatedly been adjourned because no prosecutor appeared; by April 2009, the prosecution had caused no less than four trial adjournments by the simple expedient of not showing up, with the result that the accused remained in jail with no need for the prosecutor to prove the allegations against him.
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUS148609+19-Mar-2008+PRN20080319
Finally, Justice Afiuni ruled that the Constitution required that he be released on bail. She required Cedeno to report to police twice weekly.
Within one hour of her decision, Security Police entered her courtroom and pulled her down from the bench, placing her in custody.
PRESIDENTIAL INTERVENTION
The day of her arrest by Security Police, President Chavez went on national tv to denounce Justice Afiuni as a "bandit" and demanded that she receive 30 years in prison for her crimes, "in the name of the people." In Bolivaran times, he said, she would have been shot.
The next day, Justice Afiuni was denied bail, even though a person with no previous criminal record is entitled to bail, to ensure that punishment does not precede proof.
CORRUPTION
The corruption charge against Afiuni requires a showing by the prosecutor that the judge received a benefit in exchange for her decision to release Cedeno on bail.
Justice Afiuni was given a preliminary hearing on May 17th,2010. On that date, the prosecution admitted that it had no evidence that Justice Afiuni had received money, or the promise of money, or any other goods, for releasing the prisoner; but argued that "anything" can be a benefit pursuant to the criminal Code. The preliminary hearing judge agreed, stating that the benefit received by the accused, Afiuni, need not be a "material" benefit, but includes "an emotional or spiritual benefit" (afectivo o espiritual). Thus, the international approval which the judge received for her decision to grant bail could be the basis for trying her for corruption, since she likely benefited spiritually or emotionally from this approval.
She was sent on to trial on this charge on the basis of this reasoning, which was termed "absurd"
by one of the authors of the Venezuelan Criminal Code, Professor Alberto Arteaga. He noted that any important judicial decision will likely receive approval from someone, including correct legal decisions. Presumably, the more correct and courageous the decision, the more approval it will receive. Such approval will not render the decision "corrupt" without proof of a promise or delivery of a tangible benefit reducible to money or property, he said.
ASSISTING AN ESCAPE
Judge Afiuni was also charged with assisting an escape. According to the Chief Prosecutor for Venezuela, a person released on lawful bail requires a "certificate of release", which, she said, had not been signed by Judge Afiuni in the case of Cedeno. Such a certificate ought to have been on the file, and it was not there, leading to the conclusion that the release had been extra-legal, she said. Any act not done through proper channels is illegal, and therefore criminal, she added. The critical nature of the absence of this certificate was repeatedly mentioned by the Chief Prosecutor, on national television interviews and elsewhere. The same argument was relied upon at the preliminary hearing by the local prosecutors.
Justice Afiuni was sent on to face trial on the "assisting an escape" charge, due in substanial part to the absence of the signed Certificate of Release (Boleto de Excarcelacion).
The Certificate has now been found. It can be viewed online. http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=31593701&fbid=1579472207770&id=1264603023
It is appropriately numbered and bears Afiuni's signature and judicial stamp, which was seized by prosecutors at the moment of her arrest. The certificate simply mysteriously reappeared in the file, six months after Justice Afiuni's arrest, and subsequent to her preliminary hearing.
Although it is undeniable that Afiuni has a right to at least a modified jury trial--with two jurors and one judge--pursuant to s. 62 of the Code of Criminal Procedure--she has been denied this right by the assigned judge. That judge, one Ali Paredes, had written to the governing party prior to being assigned the case, but while a sitting judge, to tell them that:
"I am very proud to have some family members who are forerunners of this grand revolutionary process which we are living in. And also let me say that I will never commit treason against this process end especially against my comandante because I bear the revolution in my blood." http://web.psuv.org.ve/?q=node/4802
Paredes refused to allow jurors to be selected for participation in the trial, without giving any reasons.
Afiuni's lawyers appealed this decision, arguing that Chavez's earlier intervention, coupled with the judge's view that Chavez was his comandante, created a reasonable apprehension of bias. They also argued that Paredes has no juridiction to try Afiuni alone, since the Code requires two jurors, when, as here, a "mixed" trial has been selected by an accused.
These arguments were rejected on appeal. No substantive reasons were given, though the Appeal Judge noted that Paredes' decision had been xeroxed, and therefore was not "the original decision being appealed." No one had ever heard of this doctrine before.
As of this writing, Justice Afiuni has been in custody for one year. No trial date has been set.
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Fidel Castro's Gorbachev Moment
Friday, July 30, 2010
On Wednesday, July 28th, Judge Ali Paredes decided that Justice Afiuni's trial will take place on August 10th, 2010, and it will be a "judge alone" trial, despite the fact that the law supposedly insures that she be able to elect the mode of her trial.
Justice Afiuni is in jail because she granted bail to a political prisoner, contrary to the desires of President Hugo Chavez. Even though the Venezuelan Constitition mandated release, Justice Afiuni was arrested within the hour and pulled down from the bench by security police.
Since the charges--"aiding an escape" and "corruption" allow a possible sentence of life imprisonment, the right to a jury trial is guaranteed by the COPP, or Criminal Procedure Statute, Article 62. http://www.analitica.com/bitblio/congreso_venezuela/penal.asp
Thursday, May 20, 2010
The government lawyers immediately announced that there was no evidence of any payment made, or promise of payment to Justice Afiuni by anyone.
It was the general opinion among lawyers that this concession meant that Justice Afiuni would have to be freed, since without payments or promises of payment, where's the corruption?
But these lawyers were reckoning without the assigned judge, who has been assigned to many of the "political" cases, and who has no permanent position as a judge--she serves at the discretion of the President.
That judge, Leyvis Azuaje, held that the very fact that a prisoner was released by Justice Afiuni could well be a benefit to Judge Afiuni! So, she was committed to trial on all charges.
One informed observer, Ligia Bolívar, the director of the Centre for Human Rights of the Catholic University Andrés Bello said the decision showed that Venezuela is no longer functioning as a society of laws.
http://eluniversal.com/2010/05/19/pol_ava_venezuela-se-coloca_19A3892379.shtml
The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Independence of the Judiciary also supported Justice Afiuni, stating in her report of June 3, 2010 that:
"Particular attention must go to grave violations of human rights. The Special Rapporteur expressed her grave concern about the case of Judge Maria Lourdes Afiuni and said she was awaiting the response of the Venezuelan Government. "
http://www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/judiciary/docs/A.HRC.14.26.pdf
Saturday, May 1, 2010
Chavez Stenographers
Vague allegations of "corruption" and " conspiracy" were standards of Stalin's justice, and Suggett doesn't disappoint. He tells us about a banker, one Cedeno, who was brought into Justice Afiuni's court. He thinks that squirting out the words "fraud" and "banker" will convince most readers that there must be some guilt there.
So Justice Afiuni granted Cedeno bail. What legal alternative existed? What would an honest judge do? If there were a legal argument in favour of continued detention, shouldn't the prosecution have come into court and made it?
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Three excuses have been given by the prosecution so far: "there is no transportation" to bring Justice Afiuni to court, or "the court information (la causa) has been misplaced", or "the hearing judge is indisposed".
So, Justice Afiuni has been in custody for five months without a preliminary hearing, guaranteed by law, after setting one three times. She was entitled to a hearing by Mid-March at the latest. The New York Times and the Washington Post are on the case, and "there is no transportation available" to bring the accused to court.
Our solidarity reporter/stenographer doesn't mention any of this; he'd rather rely on "private conversation" . And he'll tell us all about the Penal Code when he's describing the allegations, but won't mention violation of those sections which protect civil rights.
General District Attorney's Office of Venezuela were absent for the trial. This marks the fourth time no prosecutor appeared and the fourth time no advance notice or explanation for the absences was provided by Venezuelan prosecutors." http://www.reuters.com/article/idUS148609+19-Mar-2008+PRN20080319
The real claim of the Chavez government is this: prosecutors can ignore a judge's order to attend a hearing, No matter what rights are being violated, unless the Prosecutor deigns to attend, nothing can happen to the prisoner except continued detention without trial.
No one who believes in civil liberties could possibly accept this.
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Suggett's blindness to any possible human rights issue leads him to crtiticize New York Times reporter Romero:
"Romero asserted that Judge Afiuni and Eligio Cedeño were political prisoners. This is clearly inaccurate, especially since no evidence was presented that they were politically active."
Could there be a more impoverished, wilfully blind idea of who is a political prisoner? As a matter of international human rights law, for one thing, it doesn't depend upon whether the prisoner was politically active; it depends on how the authorities treat him or her.
If the authorities don't want an independent judiciary, they will arrest independent judges. It is the authorities wshose motivation is political. A judge to whom this happens, like Justice Afiuni, is being politically persecuted.Can Suggitt really be so blind as not to know this?
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It's too bad that the Venezuelan Revolution, after some useful reforms, has turned down the usual path towards one party, one person dictatorship. Believers like Suggett may eventually recognize their mistake and move on; their victims are those, like Justice Afiuni, who sit in a dank cell while Suggett writes his apologetics.