Bosnia and Herzegovina Mehinovic v. Vuckovic (War crimes and
ethnic cleansing) This case was filed on behalf of
Bosnian Muslims tortured by a
Bosnian Serb soldier at a detention camp in Bosnia-Herzegovina. The charges included torture;
crimes against humanity;
arbitrary detention; cruel,
inhuman and degrading treatment; war crimes; and genocide. In 2002, the
U.S District Court for the Northern District of Georgia held Vuckovic liable and awarded each plaintiff $10 million in
compensatory damages and $25 million each in
punitive damages.
Chile Cabello v. Fernández Larios (
Augusto Pinochet's "
Caravan of Death") In 2001, CJ filed a case against Armando Fernández Larios, an operative of the former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet and officer in the notorious "Caravan of Death", a Chilean military delegation believed to have killed more than 70 civilians during a journey by helicopter 1973. In 2003, a Florida jury found Fernández Larios responsible for torture and murder and awarded the plaintiffs four million dollars in damages. The trial marks the first time that any Pinochet operative has been tried in the United States for their role in human rights abuses committed in Chile, as well as the first jury verdict for crimes against humanity in the United States.
China Doe v. Liu Qi (Torture and religious persecution) In February 2002, CJA filed a civil action against the
Liu Qi — Mayor of
Beijing and head of the
Beijing 2008 Olympic Games Committee. The suit alleged that Qi had authority over police forces in Beijing who had carried out brutal repressive measures against
Falun Gong practitioners. In 2004, Judge Claudia Wilken issued a
default judgment against
Liu Qi for his role in the torture of Falun Gong practitioners.
El Salvador Romagoza Arce v. García (Command responsibility for atrocities) Filed in 1999, the case charged Generals José Guillermo García and Carlos Eugenio Vides Casanova with liability for torture. The generals both served as former Ministers of Defense. In 2002, a West Palm Beach, Florida jury found the generals responsible for the torture of the three plaintiffs. In January 2006, the 11th Circuit court upheld the $54.6 million jury verdict on appeal and in July 2006, Defendant Vides Casanova was forced to relinquish over $300,000 of his own assets.
Doe v. Saravia (Assassination of Archbishop
Óscar Romero ) The March 24, 1980 assassination of Salvadoran Archbishop Óscar Romero — a revered human rights defender — was arguably the most infamous political murder in 20th-century Latin America. Yet for years, one of the perpetrators of this crime, Alvaro Saravia, lived freely in Modesto, California. In 2003, CJA filed a suit against Saravia alleging that he procured weapons and vehicles to assist in the assassination, provided his personal driver to transport the assassin to and from the chapel where Romero was shot and paid the assassin for his deed. In September 2004, Judge Oliver Wanger declared that the assassination was a crime against humanity and ordered Saravia to pay $10 million to the plaintiff, a relative of the Archbishop.
Chavez v. Carranza (
Salvadoran Civil War crimes) Filed on December 10, 2003, the suit aimed to hold Colonel Carranza responsible for human rights abuses committed in El Salvador. In 2005, a Memphis federal jury found Colonel Nicolás Carranza, the former Vice-Minister of Defense of El Salvador, liable for overseeing torture and
extrajudicial killings and ordered him to pay $6 million in compensatory and punitive damages.
Jesuits Massacre case In 2008, CJA filed a criminal case in Spain against senior former Salvadoran military officials for their role in the 1989 Jesuits Massacre, in which six Jesuit Priests, their housekeeper and her daughter, were killed at the Universidad Centroamericana ¨José Simeon Cañas¨ (UCA) in El Salvador. On January 13, 2009, the 14 officers and soldiers named in the case were formally charged with crimes against humanity and state terrorism.
Guatemala The Guatemala Genocide Case (The Mayan Genocide) In 2004, CJA joined a criminal complaint filed in 1999 by Nobel Laureate Rigoberta Menchú Tum and others charging former President
Efraín Ríos Montt and other senior Guatemalan officials with
state terrorism, genocide and systematic torture during a campaign against the Mayan community which claimed over 200,000 lives. In 2006, a new legal team led by CJA began working with attorneys from Guatemala, the Netherlands, Spain and the U.S. to develop evidence on the Mayan genocide. As of 2009, CJA international staff attorney,
Almudena Bernabeu is lead counsel for the plaintiffs.
Haiti Jean v. Dorélien (The High Command and the
Raboteau Massacre) In 2003, CJA filed U.S. state and federal cases against Colonel Carl Dorélien—a Haitian officer who held command responsibility for the April 22, 1994 massacre in a pro-democracy neighborhood in
Gonaïves and for the torture of the union activist Lexius Cajuste Dorélien's presence in the United States became widely known when he won $3.2 million in the Florida lottery in 1997. In 2007, a Miami federal jury found Colonel Carl Dorélien liable for abuses and ordered him to pay $4.3 million. In a separate state court action, a landmark $580,000 was recovered for Haitian massacre survivors. In May 2008, over $400,000 was distributed to the Raboteau victims.
Doe v. Constant (
Death squads and
violence against women) CJA represents three Haitian women in a lawsuit against Emmanuel "Toto" Constant for his participation in a range of human rights abuses committed in 1993–1994. On October 25, 2006, U.S. District Court Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Southern District of New York ordered Constant to pay $19 million in damages to CJA's clients. In a separate criminal trial, Constant was sentenced on October 28, 2008, to 12 to 37 years in prison for his role in a criminal mortgage fraud scheme in New York. CJA's investigation of Constant contributed to this conviction.
Honduras Reyes v. López Grijalba (
Forced disappearance) In July 2002 CJA filed a lawsuit against former military intelligence chief Lt. Col. Juan López Grijalba, who had command responsibility for the abduction, torture, and extrajudicial killing of the plaintiffs and plaintiffs' family-members. Having settled in the United States, López Grijalba was deported back to Honduras in 2004. On March 31, 2006, a Florida judge held Colonel Grijalba responsible for abuses and ordered him to pay $47 million to six survivors and relatives of the disappeared. Later in 2006, the Attorney General of Honduras approached CJA to assist in a criminal prosecution of López Grijalba based on evidence produced in the U.S. civil case. To initiate the prosecution, CJA trained 80 Honduran prosecutors on bringing successful human rights cases in national courts in December 2007.
Indonesia Doe v. Lumintang (Atrocities during the
East Timor Independence Referendum) CJA and the
Center for Constitutional Rights filed a lawsuit against General Johny Lumintang for abuses committed by the Indonesian military during the violent aftermath of the September 1999 independence referendum. Lumintang was served with the complaint while in transit at
Dulles International Airport. In September 2001, he failed to appear in the case and District Judge
Gladys Kessler found in favor of the survivors, awarding them $66 million in damages. On November 9, 2004, District Judge Gladys Kessler granted Lumintang's motion to
vacate the default judgment, holding that service of the complaint and summons at Dulles Airport in
Fairfax, Virginia, did not give the
District of Columbia district court jurisdiction over Lumintang.
Peru Ochoa Lizarbe v. Hurtado (The
Accomarca Massacre I) In 2007, CJA filed suit against Major
Telmo Hurtado Hurtado and
Juan Rivera Rondón, who planned and executed a massacre of 69 civilians in the village of Accomarca, in the
Ayacucho department of
Peru on August 14, 1985. On March 4, 2008, a federal court judge in Miami ordered Major Hurtado to pay $37 million in damages.
Ochoa Lizarbe v. Rivera Rondón (The
Accomarca Massacre II) In a related case, CJA and pro bono co-counsel
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP filed a lawsuit on July 11, 2007 in a
Maryland federal district court against Rivera Rondón, a Peruvian former army lieutenant, for his role in the Accomarca Massacre. Rivera Rondón immigrated to the U.S. in the early 1990s. Following a criminal conviction on a separate offence, Rondón was deported from the U.S. on August 15, 2008, whereupon he was immediately detained by Peruvian authorities. CJA was instrumental in ensuring that he will be prosecuted for the crimes he committed in Accomarca in 1985.
Somalia Yousuf v. Samantar (
Somali Civil War and Widespread Repression) In 2004, CJA filed suit against General
Mohamed Ali Samantar, the former Somali Minister of Defense (1980 to 1986) and Prime Minister (1987 to 1990) under the regime of
Siad Barré. The suit alleges that Samantar bore command responsibility for a host of abuses carried out by his subordinates, including torture, extrajudicial killing and war crimes. On April 27, 2007, Judge Brinkema of the Federal District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia dismissed the human rights lawsuit, ruling that the defendant enjoyed immunity from civil actions under the
Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA). CJA and pro bono co-counsel from
Cooley Godward Kronish LLP, appealed to the 4th Circuit Court. On January 8, 2009, the 4th Circuit reversed and remanded the district court's decision.
Doe v. Ali (Clan Violence and Torture) On November 10, 2004 CJA filed a case against Colonel Yusuf Abdi Ali (a.k.a. Tokeh), a former officer in the
Somali National Army during the military dictatorship of Siad Barré. Plaintiffs in the case are members of the Isaaq clan who suffered human rights abuses committed personally by Tokeh or by soldiers under his direct command. The trial judge has referred the case to the State Department for its opinion.
Ahmed v. Magan On April 21, 2010, CJA filed suit against Colonel Abdi Aden Magan, former Chief of the Somali National Security Service Department of Investigations during the military dictatorship of Siad Barré, on behalf of former law professor and human rights attorney Abukar Hassan Ahmed, who suffered brutal torture under Colonel Magan's orders. The trial judge has referred the case to the State Department for its opinion.
Venezuela Luis Posada Carriles Extradition CJA represents the family of Raymond Persaud, a 19-year-old medical student killed aboard
Cubana Flight 455, in the extradition request against Luis Posada Carriles. A Cuban-born former
Venezuelan intelligence agent and paid
CIA operative in the covert during the 1960s, Carriles is implicated in several anti-Castro terrorist attacks including the 1976 bombing that killed Persuad along with 73 other people. In 2005, U.S. immigration authorities detained Carriles after he illegally entered the country. Carriles received an order for deportation on September 27, 2005. However, on May 8, 2007, the seven counts of immigration fraud were dismissed by U.S. district judge Kathleen Cardone. Eventually, a federal appeals court reversed Judge Cardone's decision on 14 August 2008. As of January 2009, the U.S. government has refused to extradite Carriles on the grounds that the immigration proceedings are still ongoing. == Transitional justice support ==