logo
Judge delays Miami trial of five men accused of plotting assassination of Haiti's president

Judge delays Miami trial of five men accused of plotting assassination of Haiti's president

Yahoo29-05-2025
The Miami trial of five men accused of plotting the assassination of Haiti's president has again been delayed, this time to March 2026 — almost five years after the fatal shooting of Jovenel Moïse at his suburban home outside Port-au-Prince.
U.S. District Judge Jacqueline Becerra said at a recent hearing that she was not happy about delaying the federal trial, which was originally set for March and then postponed until September of this year.
Becerra said she had no choice but to push it back again because of the massive volume of evidence, including more than 2.5 million text messages, emails and other records, that federal prosecutors are still turning over to the defense lawyers — a basic discovery issue that has turned into a sore point for the judge.
'I do not take it lightly in any way that this case has been delayed,' Becerra told the five defendants, who were arrested and taken into federal custody in the months after the July 7, 2021, assassination of Moïse. 'This is not a delay that I am at all happy with.'
Compounding the run-up to the Miami trial: Armed gangs have been terrorizing Haiti, a country in free fall without a political leader, making it unsafe for the defense lawyers in Miami to go there and question ex-Colombian soldiers jailed in Port-au-Prince on Haitian charges of assisting in the slaying of the president.
As a result, Judge Becerra granted the defense team's request to take video depositions of five of the Colombians, who represent about one-third of the former commandos in jail.
'Although the difficulties of traveling to Haiti to conduct these depositions should not be understated, there appears to be no reason why the depositions could not take place over video conference,' Becerra ruled after the May 19 hearing on the trial date and other issues.
Despite the judge's approval of these critical depositions, there is one potential Haitian witness whom the defense lawyers in Miami won't be able to question: Former Haitian Superior Court Judge Windelle Coq Thélot, who died in January.
Haitian authorities considered Thélot a key suspect in the investigation of Moïse's killing. But she took to the grave unanswered questions about her alleged role in the assassination plot and whether she indeed promised immunity to the defendants in Miami who are accused of directing it.
According to prosecutors in Miami, Thélot gained the support of the suspected plotters in South Florida as a replacement for Moïse in June 2021, when they decided that Christian Sanon, a Haitian priest and physician, 'was not a viable option to take over' the presidency.
Thélot's 'apparent signature' appeared on a written request for assistance to arrest Haiti's president that 'purported to provide Haitian immunity' to the conspirators in South Florida, according to an FBI affidavit filed in federal court. One of the suspects, Haitian-American maintenance worker James Solages, traveled from Haiti to Miami on June 28, 2021, to deliver the document to another suspect, Antonio 'Tony' Intriago,' the owner of a security business.
On July 1, Solages traveled back to Haiti and five days later met with several conspirators at a house near Moïse's residence. Solages 'falsely told those gathered that it was a 'CIA Operation, and, in substance, said that the mission was to kill President Moïse,' the FBI affidavit stated.
Solages and other suspects drove in a convoy to the president's home on the night of July 7, the assassination date. Once inside the residence, Solages declared they were involved in a 'DEA Operation' to ensure 'compliance from' Moïse's security team, the affidavit stated. Some of the ex-Colombian soldiers recruited for the mission were assigned to find and kill the president.
On July 22, federal agents questioned Solages while he was in Haitian custody. After he was read his Miranda rights, Solages admitted that by mid-June 2021, 'he knew that the plan was to ultimately assassinate President Moïse,' according to the FBI affidavit.
To date in the U.S. case, five of the 11 defendants have pleaded guilty to conspiring to kill Haiti's president, resulting in life sentences that they hope to get reduced with their cooperation. Among those convicted: two ex-Colombian commandos, a former Haitian senator, a Haitian-American man who worked as an informant for the DEA, and a previously convicted Haitian drug trafficker.
A sixth defendant, a Tampa businessman, pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges involving the smuggling of bulletproof vests that were illegally exported to Haiti for the group of ex-Colombian soldiers who carried out the deadly attack.
The remaining five defendants are charged with conspiring in South Florida to kidnap or kill Haiti's leader and related charges, including recruiting the Colombian commandos. The conspiracy charge carries up to life in prison.
The defendants facing trial are: Intriago, the head of a Miami-area security firm, CTU; Arcangel Pretel Ortiz, a former FBI informant who joined Intriago at CTU; Walter Veintemilla, a Broward County financier; Solages, the Haitian American; and Sanon, who was initially seen by the group as a successor to Moïse as Haiti's president. All five defendants are being held in a federal lock-up before trial.
Of the five remaining defendants, Sanon was the only one who told the judge at the hearing this month that he opposed delaying the trial until March of next year.
But Judge Becerra, while showing sympathy for his pre-trial detention over nearly four years in Haiti and Miami, said holding one trial for him and another for the others was not practical for several reasons.
'Given the complexity of the case, the government wants all the defendants tried together,' Becerra told Sanon. 'I am not inclined to try your case in September and all the other defendants in March [2026].'
In February 2024, Sanon was charged with the others with conspiring to kill Haiti's leader, after first being accused of trying to carry out a military expedition against a foreign country. It was the fifth superseding indictment filed by prosecutors with the U.S. Attorney's Office and Justice Department. Since then, most of the team has been replaced with new prosecutors.
The other four defendants did not oppose the trial delay when questioned by the judge, though Intriago expressed his frustration over the prosecution's sharing of evidence in the high-profile case.
'I don't understand why we don't have everything in our hands,' Intriago told the judge. 'I just wanted to express my frustration that the government give us all the information and not hide anything from us.'
Since the president's assassination at his home outside Port-au-Prince, Haiti has plunged into total chaos as armed gangs have terrorized the island nation with no presidential election on the horizon.
While the U.S. investigation led by the FBI moved quickly to arrests and charges in Miami, Haiti's probe of the president's slaying only resulted in an indictment in February 2024. A total of 51 people were charged by an investigative judge in collaboration with a prosecutor.
Sanon is the only defendant charged in the Haiti prosecution that was also named as a defendant in the Miami case.
Among those in Haiti accused of the deadly attack: the slain president's widow, Martine Moïse, who suffered gunshot wounds during the assault on the family's home.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mixed results for 'Rage Against the Regime' day of action
Mixed results for 'Rage Against the Regime' day of action

UPI

time41 minutes ago

  • UPI

Mixed results for 'Rage Against the Regime' day of action

Aug. 2 (UPI) -- The same organization behind prior protests against the Trump administration reported mixed results for Saturday's "Rage Against the Regime" protests across the country. The protests are part of the ninth "national day of action" event coordinated so far this year by the 50501 Movement, which opposes President Donald Trump and his administration's policies. Organizers accuse the Trump administration of "heralding ... American neo-fascism," building "concentration camps" and funding "genocide." They also accuse Trump of "weaponization of ICE against our communities, construction of concentration camps, covering up the Epstein files, attacks on transgender rights and ... dismantling of Medicaid, SNAP, USAID, the Department of Education, NOAA and the National Weather Service." The protests are intended to be peaceful, but at least one local organizer changed the name to "Rise Against the Regime" to emphasize its peaceful intent for the protest in San Angelo, Texas. Several posts on the 50501 Movements' Facebook page expressed disappointment over low turnout at many of the protests, while others said hundreds showed up. The organization says "50501" refers to 50 protests in 50 states in one day and calls the Trump administration a "threat" to democracy and human rights, The Hill reported. About 350 Rage Against the Regime protests were scheduled in communities across the nation. The name of Saturday's collective protests references the Los Angeles rock band Rage Against the Machine. Other nationwide protests organized by the 50501 Movement include the "No Kings Day" protest held on June 14 and the "Good Trouble Lives On" protest held on the anniversary of former Rep. John Lewis' death on July 17.

Delta Air Lines assures U.S. lawmakers it will not personalize fares using AI
Delta Air Lines assures U.S. lawmakers it will not personalize fares using AI

NBC News

time43 minutes ago

  • NBC News

Delta Air Lines assures U.S. lawmakers it will not personalize fares using AI

WASHINGTON - Delta Air Lines said on Friday it will not use artificial intelligence to set personalized ticket prices for passengers after facing sharp criticism from U.S. lawmakers and broad public concern. Last week, Democratic Senators Ruben Gallego, Mark Warner and Richard Blumenthal said they believed the Atlanta-based airline would use AI to set individual prices, which would 'likely mean fare price increases up to each individual consumer's personal 'pain point.'' Delta said it has not used AI to set personalized prices but previously said it plans to deploy AI-based revenue management technology across 20% of its domestic network by the end of 2025 in partnership with Fetcherr, an AI pricing company. 'There is no fare product Delta has ever used, is testing or plans to use that targets customers with individualized prices based on personal data,' Delta told the senators in a letter on Friday, seen by Reuters. 'Our ticket pricing never takes into account personal data.' Senators praised Delta's commitment not to use AI for personal pricing but expressed many questions and want more details about what data Delta is collecting to set prices. 'Delta is telling their investors one thing, and then turning around and telling the public another,' Gallego said. 'If Delta is in fact using aggregated instead of individualized data, that is welcome news.' Delta declined comment on Gallego's statement. The senators cited a comment in December by Delta President Glen Hauenstein that the carrier's AI price-setting technology is capable of setting fares based on a prediction of 'the amount people are willing to pay for the premium products related to the base fares.' Last week, American Airlines CEO Robert Isom said using AI to set ticket prices could hurt consumer trust. 'This is not about bait and switch. This is not about tricking,' Isom said on an earnings call, adding 'talk about using AI in that way, I don't think it's appropriate. And certainly from American, it's not something we will do.' Democratic lawmakers Greg Casar and Rashida Tlaib last week introduced legislation to bar companies from using AI to set prices or wages based on Americans' personal data and would specifically ban airlines raising individual prices after seeing a search for a family obituary. They cited a Federal Trade Commission staff report in January that found 'retailers frequently use people's personal information to set targeted, tailored prices for goods and services -- from a person's location and demographics, down to their mouse movements on a webpage.' The FTC cited a hypothetical example of a consumer profiled as a new parent who could intentionally be shown higher-priced baby thermometers and collect behavioral details to forecast a customer's state of mind. Delta said airlines have used dynamic pricing for more than three decades, in which pricing fluctuates based on a variety of factors like overall customer demand, fuel prices and competition, but not a specific consumer's personal information. 'Given the tens of millions of fares and hundreds of thousands of routes for sale at any given time, the use of new technology like AI promises to streamline the process by which we analyze existing data and the speed and scale at which we can respond to changing market dynamics,' Delta's letter said.

Pope Francis Critic Brian Burch Confirmed as Vatican Ambassador
Pope Francis Critic Brian Burch Confirmed as Vatican Ambassador

Newsweek

timean hour ago

  • Newsweek

Pope Francis Critic Brian Burch Confirmed as Vatican Ambassador

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Brian Burch, president of CatholicVote, was confirmed by the Senate Saturday as the Ambassador to the Holy See. He wone in a party line vote of 49-44, according to a post on X by the Senate Press Gallery. Burch, who has been critical of decisions made by the late Pope Francis, was nominated by President Donald Trump for the position earlier this year. "I am profoundly grateful to President Trump and the United States Senate for this opportunity to serve as the next U.S. Ambassador to the Holy See," Burch said in part in a post on X following the vote Saturday. "I have the honor and privilege of serving in this role following the historic selection of the first American pope." Burch previously said the pope's 2023 decision allowing priests to bless individuals in same-sex unions created "confusion" within the church, Newsweek previously reported. He also predicted that the pontiff would not be in office much longer and characterized Francis' leadership as having a "pattern of vindictiveness." This is a breaking news story. Updates to come.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store