Gustavo Villoldo, Man Who Tracked Che For The CIA, Awarded $1 Billion In Lawsuit

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CURT ANDERSON | May 29, 2009 06:01 PM EST | AP

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MIAMI — A judge on Friday awarded more than $1 billion in damages against the Cuban government for the 1959 suicide of the father of a Cuban-American man who was involved in the CIA-backed capture and killing of revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara.

Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Peter Adrien said he wanted to send a signal to Cuba's government with the huge damage award, which likely will prove difficult if not impossible to collect. But the attorney for Gustavo Villoldo, 76, and his younger brother, Alfredo, said his law firm would scour the globe for Cuban assets to satisfy the judgment.

"They finally get justice," said lawyer Jeremy Alters. "We will use every bit of our resources to collect this."

The award came in a lawsuit filed by Villoldo, who blamed Guevara, Fidel Castro and others for his father's 1959 suicide in Cuba. The family fled to the U.S. and Villoldo later took part in the CIA's Bay of Pigs invasion and was involved in catching Guevara in Bolivia.

Cuba's current government refused to respond to the lawsuit and offered no defense. It did not immediately reply to a request in Havana for comment.

Villoldo's father took his life by a sleeping pill overdose in February 1959, shortly after Fidel Castro, Guevara and the other communist revolutionaries seized power in Cuba. The elder Villoldo was a prominent Cuban businessman who also held U.S. citizenship and owned a major General Motors distributorship, a 33,000-acre ranch and several other holdings and properties.

The family was targeted soon after Castro took over as "lackeys of the United States and Yankee imperialists," according to the judge's ruling. The father was beaten, deprived of food, interrogated for days and repeatedly told he would be executed as a purported U.S. agent.

Soon after the man's release from jail, Guevara visited the elder Villoldo personally and forced him to choose either death by firing squad himself or the execution of his son, Alters said. He chose to die, then opted for suicide rather than giving Guevara and Castro the satisfaction of killing him.

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"The undisputed evidence at trial established that defendants' conduct rose to such a level of depravity that they caused Mr. Villoldo to take his life, and their actions are properly classified as torture," Adrien said in a seven-page decision.

The younger Villoldo joined the U.S. military and CIA, taking part in the failed 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion. A few years later, Villoldo was among a group hunting for Guevara, finally catching up with him in Bolivia in 1967. Guevara was subsequently executed and buried in Bolivia.

The lawsuit filed last year sought damages against the Cuban government, Fidel and Raul Castro and Guevara for wrongful death and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Adrien awarded nearly $1.2 billion: $393 million in economic damages suffered by the family; $393 million for pain and suffering; and $393 million in punitive damages.

The award dwarfs several other similar Cuban damage awards, including $400 million for the family of American Robert Fuller _ executed in October 1960 _ little of which has ever been paid

Some have fared better.

A New York federal judge in 2006 ordered payment of $91 million out of frozen Cuban accounts to the families of two men who died after the Bay of Pigs invasion, and in 2001 families collected $93 million from similar accounts for the 1996 downing of three Cuban exiles who flew Brothers to the Rescue planes that were shot down by Cuban MIG fighters.

Alters said any thaw in relations between Cuba and the U.S. should include satisfaction of judgments such as that awarded to Villoldos.

"They can't get away with torture and then expect to get back into the U.S. economy," he said.

MIAMI — A judge on Friday awarded more than $1 billion in damages against the Cuban government for the 1959 suicide of the father of a Cuban-American man who was involved in the CIA-backed captu...
MIAMI — A judge on Friday awarded more than $1 billion in damages against the Cuban government for the 1959 suicide of the father of a Cuban-American man who was involved in the CIA-backed captu...
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- DragonFly I'm a Fan of DragonFly 17 fans permalink
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I seriously believe that there would be no resistance from the GOP if Obama were to suddenly lose his mind and nominate Judge Peter Adrien to the Federal Supreme Court.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:17 PM on 05/30/2009
- filmex I'm a Fan of filmex 7 fans permalink
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Can you imagine the CIA having to pay $1 billion for every death they caused throughout Latin America over the past 50 years? Talk about breaking the bank!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:12 PM on 05/30/2009
- Beowoof I'm a Fan of Beowoof 10 fans permalink

Isn't that the cost we pay in taxes to wreak that havoc.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:18 PM on 05/30/2009
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And if they can't collect in dollars they'll collect in cigars and old cars. Truly a WTF moment.

SOT

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:06 PM on 05/30/2009
- django707 I'm a Fan of django707 11 fans permalink

"can't get away with torture and then expect to get back into the U.S. economy"

That's the way you get into the American economy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 PM on 05/30/2009
- JohanD I'm a Fan of JohanD 7 fans permalink

This man should have been thrown in jail instead and he probably would still be alive. Murder remains murder even when the Justice Department approves of it. It makes them accomplices as well. But then again the department of justice has taken all the power and and is arrogant enough to bypass all laws and constitution, as they believe they are way above and better than the law.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:48 PM on 05/30/2009
- BikeFreak I'm a Fan of BikeFreak 30 fans permalink
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Agreed to and co-signed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:31 PM on 05/30/2009
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I think the extended family of Che needs to sue Villoldo and the CIA for the wrongful death and execution of Che Guevara. Let's see, 1 Trillion US should cover it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:48 PM on 05/30/2009
- sshaler I'm a Fan of sshaler 4 fans permalink

This is about the most ludicrous thing I've read lately in the news. As if killing Che Guevara wasn't cold-blooded murder. That should have satisfied Mr. Villoldo's lust for revenge.
The Cuban revolution is an historical event beyond the personal. I guess the British courts will start prosecutions against the US for the Brits killed and injured in the US revolution. Makes perfect sense in light of this case.
And since when does someone's life have a pricetag on it? The US, in this spirit of money for lives taken, has given some, not all, of the victims of the Iraq invasion and occupation $10,000.00 to $20,000.00 for the loss of their loved ones. How does one life get to be worth a billion dollars and another worth 10 thousand?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:46 PM on 05/30/2009
- Americano I'm a Fan of Americano 3 fans permalink
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More, nonsensical US/Cuban-American "Pro" KEEP-THE-E­NBARGO-Goi­ng Neo-Cons! Losers!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 05/30/2009
- GoDogGo I'm a Fan of GoDogGo 32 fans permalink
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I'm no Cuban apologist but this is ridiculous. Are we going to be liable for billions now that it's been revealed we tortured and killed Afghans and Iraqis? If this is just, so may that be...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 PM on 05/30/2009
- Tulka2 I'm a Fan of Tulka2 266 fans permalink
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I always stand with the underdog, but if this story is read carefully it is difficult to say who the underdogs are. #1. I would like to hear what the elder Villoldo did in Cuba to provoke the ire of Castro. #2. It says here the younger Villoldo helped track down Che in Bolivia. I want him put on trial for that piece of murder.

Bless and protect Obama from the CIA. Every president who has crossed them in the last fifty years suffers real bad luck.

(Who can forget the split screen of Reagan being sworn in as President and on the other half of the screen the Iranian hostages being freed. And then.... Reagan made his campaign manager head of the CIA and he went on to sell arms to Iran and he turned that money around to fund the Contras in Nicaragua.­)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:29 PM on 05/30/2009

need we mention that the delayed "release" was negotiated OFF the record by REPUBLICAN operatives to gain voters for the election . . . "Republican Hostage Trade For Votes" . . . .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:21 PM on 05/30/2009
- Tulka2 I'm a Fan of Tulka2 266 fans permalink
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Poor Jimmy Carter. Carter promised to clean up the CIA and look where it got him. Then there's Kennedy's Bay of Pigs. Kennedy's assassination has always reeked of the CIA spooks and i'm not even Oliver Stone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:01 PM on 05/30/2009
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Huh? Crazy!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:12 PM on 05/30/2009

I stand for this ruling.

However the US can no longer dismiss torture cases brought by people wrongly assumed to be terrorists and kidnapped and tortured on Behalf of the US government in other countries.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:11 PM on 05/30/2009

Elected judge? Playing to a wingnut ex-pat Cuban community?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:02 PM on 05/30/2009
- baba2nde I'm a Fan of baba2nde 16 fans permalink
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I have 2 questions for our lawyer friends: 1) Does Miami-Dade (county) have jurisdiction over (the country of) Cuba; and 2) did Cuba enter its appearance to defend the lawsuit?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:00 PM on 05/30/2009

Well said! I love to hear intelligent comments from people concerning Fidel, Che, and others like them. The only reason that they are "bad" people is because our government has painted them as such to cover up their own absurd and exploitative policies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:46 PM on 05/30/2009
- Beowoof I'm a Fan of Beowoof 10 fans permalink

Whether it's the American, French, Russian or Cuban Revolutions, they're all reactions to bad policy making, but it's just too bad that the bloodletting in most cases led to something as bad or worse.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:13 PM on 05/30/2009
- MalakAlHaq I'm a Fan of MalakAlHaq 14 fans permalink

Another ridiculous lawsuit with an equally absurd decision.

One has to wonder if the judge's association with the south Florida Cuban community had anything to do with the outcome. The answer has to be undeniably yes.

As for Che, this country would be lucky if it had someone like Che working for justice for both those of us in the USA and abroad.

If it were not for neoliberalism, the robbery of local resources and the oppression of people there would be no Che's.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:57 PM on 05/30/2009

I agree, Today's conservatives are Neoliberals of the extreme left.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:11 PM on 05/30/2009
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