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30062: Hermantin(News)Ex-Haitian officer faces civil trial on rights allegations (fwd)
From: leonie hermantin <lhermantin@hotmail.com>
Posted on Mon, Feb. 19, 2007
FEDERAL COURT
Ex-Haitian officer faces civil trial on rights allegations
A former Haitian army colonel will be judged in Miami in a civil trial to
determine his liability in the death of one person and the torture of another.
BY ALFONSO CHARDY
achardy@MiamiHerald.com
Carl Dorelien was among high-ranking military officers who overthrew Haitian
president Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 1991 and then served as army colonel in the
central command until U.S. troops landed in 1994 to restore Aristide to office.
Dorelien then fled to the United States and settled in Florida where he bought
a Lotto ticket in 1997 and won $3.2 million. Accused of human rights violations
back home, Dorelien was deported in 2003 -- and then lost control of his
jackpot.
Now, Dorelien faces a civil trial in Miami federal court for allegedly
tolerating human rights abuses while serving in Haiti. U.S. District Judge
James Lawrence King is to begin selecting jurors Tuesday. The lawsuit seeks
unspecified compensatory and punitive damages against Dorelien in connection
with the alleged torture of Lexiuste Cajuste in Port-au-Prince in 1993 and the
killing of Michel Pierre in the infamous 1994 massacre in Raboteau.
NOT IN COURT
Dorelien will not be at the trial but his Miami attorney, Kurt Klaus, will
present a defense. He told The Miami Herald Friday that his client is not
responsible for Cajuste's alleged torture or the Raboteau deaths.
''He had no direct command of troops,'' Klaus said. ``He was an attache in the
central command office, but he was just an administrator. The only reason they
are bringing the lawsuit here is because Mr. Dorelien won the Florida Lottery
and they see dollar signs.''
The lawsuit is separate from an order last year by a judge in Tallahassee who
ruled that about $808,000 left from the jackpot should be paid to relatives of
Raboteau victims including Pierre's widow -- one of the lawsuit plaintiffs.
Dorelien has appealed the jackpot order and the case is pending.
Cajuste, who now lives in Jacksonville, told The Miami Herald last year that he
was tortured in 1993 at a police station in Port-au-Prince. Cajuste said he was
arrested after he went to a radio station to deliver a news release calling for
a general strike.
Pierre died in Raboteau, a neighborhood of the Haitian city of Gonaives, when
Haitian soldiers and civilian paramilitary supporters rampaged through the area
in 1994.
DEADLY RAMPAGE
At least 26 unarmed men, women and children were killed during the two-day
rampage, including Pierre.
The lawsuit was filed by the Center for Justice & Accountability, a San
Francisco human rights organization.
''After waiting more than 12 years, our clients will finally have their day in
court, and, for the first time, one of the many high-ranking members of the
Haitian Armed Forces who found refuge in the U.S. after the restoration of
democracy to Haiti, will have to answer to a U.S. jury for the allegations of
widespread and severe human rights abuses,'' said Pamela Merchant, the group's
executive director.
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