Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Freed American says more U.S. citizens remain in Nicaraguan jails
By Emily Flitter and Mary Slosson
NEW YORK (Reuters) - When a guard at a Nicaraguan prison showed Jason Puracal the newspaper headline saying he would be freed, he tried to walk out of jail that instant, only to be sent back to his cell.
A few days later, however, Puracal, the U.S. citizen who was jailed in Nicaragua two years ago after being wrongfully convicted of drug trafficking and money laundering, walked free.
"The whole process has been very surreal," Puracal, 35, said in an interview with Reuters on Monday.
He said he had faced hunger, squalid conditions and the constant threat of violence while in prison.
"It's a very hot, dirty, crowded, insect-infested place," he said. "I would just think of my son. He was the ray of hope that kept me going."
And Puracal says there are more like him in the prison where he was held, innocent people, some of whom are U.S. citizens, serving long sentences after being wrongfully convicted.
"I've been told there's literally hundreds," he said.
Puracal was detained by Nicaraguan authorities in November 2010 and found guilty by a trial judge nine months later along with 10 co-defendants, all of them Nicaraguan nationals. He initially received a 22-year prison sentence but was released last week after a campaign by international rights activists to overturn his conviction.
An appeals court ordered that his trial be annulled because the judge did not substantiate the reasons for his verdict and excluded evidence defence attorneys wanted to present.
Puracal said he had no idea why he was targeted by Nicaraguan authorities.
Puracal's co-defendants, who also were released under the court order, testified they had never met or worked with him, and the prosecution's own witnesses said Puracal was innocent, according to his legal team.
Puracal became a cause célèbre for human rights activists in the United States and around the world, with U.S. lawmakers appealing to Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega and a former high-ranking U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration official launching a massive petition drive on Puracal's behalf.
His sister Janice spearheaded the earliest attempts to win his freedom.
"She's exhausted all of her resources - all of the family's resources," he said, adding the family had spent more than $500,000 to overturn his conviction.
Puracal, a native of Washington state, became a resident of Nicaragua after serving there as a Peace Corps volunteer in 2002. He married a Nicaraguan woman, with whom he has a son, now 5 years old.
Before his arrest, he was working at a real estate office in the Nicaraguan city of San Juan del Sur, a surfing destination on the Pacific Coast. Puracal's supporters said he came under suspicion due to his job as a real estate agent, which gave him control over large sums of money held in escrow for property transactions.
Prosecutors said Puracal used a real estate company to buy properties with drug money.
The U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention said in May that Puracal was arbitrarily imprisoned and recommended he be freed.
The appeals court heard Puracal's case last month after his supporters pushed for a hearing, saying he was wrongly convicted. The supporters redoubled their efforts earlier this summer after learning that Puracal, who had been in solitary confinement, was put on suicide watch by Nicaraguan authorities.
Puracal's other backers include a human rights lawyer who previously worked on behalf of former Czech President Vaclav Havel and Nobel Peace Prize laureates Aung San Suu Kyi of Myanmar and Desmond Tutu of South Africa.
Even the California Innocence Project, which normally focuses on wrongfully convicted inmates in that state's prison system, took up his cause.
Puracal said he may someday return to Nicaragua to finish the community development work he was doing before he was arrested. He also hopes to help others fight wrongful imprisonment.
And he has learned this lesson: "Never stop saying I love you to the people in your life."
(Editing by Bill Trott)
Copyright © 2013 Reuters
- 600 left homeless after fire in one of Sarawak's oldest Malay villages
- NS trainee gives birth in camp toilet
- Sabah Railway train rams car driven by Hong Kong tourist, driver in critical condition
- Ex-judge calls for rebranding of vernacular schools
- Berapit rep assaulted after advising woman not to conduct open burning
- Penang freak storm: Video clip of lightning arrester collapse uploaded on YouTube

- No brotherly love - man attacked and robbed by his twin
- Black 505 rally supporters stage another flash mob in KL
- Subramaniam: Health Ministry to set up operation rooms where API exceeds 200
- Penang freak storm: Police complete probe, no human remains found in car wreckage
- Delays in KLIA2 opening affecting AirAsia's expansion plans, says CEO
- Open sale of sex stimulants in Sabah worries Kiulu rep Bangkuai
- Seven out of 12 Opposition reps in Sabah want Lajim as chief
- Robbery at sea of cargo ship being investigated, unsure if pirates involved, say police
- Fire and Rescue Department: 14 areas highly susceptible to forest fires identified
- Kulim suspended on Thursday for corporate announcement
- Petronas Dagangan eyes regional airports to expand jet fuel biz
- KLCI ends in the red, BAT, UMW down (Update)
- Gloom lifted from MRCB Southern Link as ratings upgraded
- Malaysia's May inflation rate up 1.8% on-year
- Nazir: Bank of Commerce talks to conclude shortly
- Japan's exports pick up pace, give economy momentum
- Asia business sentiment rises in second quarter, global growth risk still dominates
- Moody's: Outlook on China's life insurance industry stable
- AIA and Public Bank offer new insurance plans
- Tambun Indah plans RM200m capex to expand landbank
- Tune Ins sees healthy growth as air travel, tourism pick up
- Nazir Razak: Rising likelihood of major reversal of hot money out from Asia
- Blue chips edge higher in volatile trade (Update)
- Eversendai tendering for RM8b of projects
- Singapore smog reaches record high (Updated)
- India monsoon floods leave 138 dead
- Turkey's 'silent man' vigils go on as protests fizzle out
- French floods claim first victim, Lourdes remains closed
- Thousands evacuated after blasts at Russian arms depot
- Bieber off hook after car hits photographer
- Mexico arrests man on FBI's top 10 Most Wanted list
- Disabled woman, US child held captive with snakes
- World's largest all-solar-powered boat shines in NYC
- Samoan airline introduces 'XL' class
- West Africa has world's worst piracy rate
- Congolese teacher admits killing elephants for ivory: WWF
- NASA enlists public in hunt for major asteroids
- Nadal seeded five at Wimbledon
- NBA: Heat beat Spurs to force game seven
- FedEx eyes record win at Wimbledon
- Brazilian Massa looking ahead to team’s revival
- V Shem-Khim Wah face tough opener in Singapore Open
- Springboks’ De Villiers may miss final
- Results worldwide
- Former world junior champ Zulfadli in main draw
- Star Wallaby winger fit to face Lions
- Hesson laments NZ’s failure to grab chance
- Omega Pharma pin Tour hopes on Mark
- Shahidan needs Cabinet nod to hold posts, says Khairy
- Direct flight now to Naypyitaw for Malaysian SEA Games squad
- Aussie Kulacz hopes to repeat 2009 Selangor Masters triumph
- India’s Anirban relying on short putter for success
- Two-year-old makes touching request at her dad’s funeral
- Rush to escape storm proves deadly
- Boy nabbed for buying air rifles
- CCTV to shed light on missing hawker
- Airsoft guns are easily available online
- Medium threatens couple with black magic
- Want a gun? Just print it out
- New DAP man turns on his party after elections
- Mentally disabled man missing since Sunday
- Four times as many hotspots in Sumatra now
- Ex-judge calls for rebranding of vernacular schools
- Want a gun? Just print it out
- Inter-Pacific Research values AirAsia X at RM1.66
- Boy nabbed for buying air rifles
- Penang freak storm: Video clip of lightning arrester collapse uploaded on YouTube
- Perodua expects more competitive auto business environment
- Nazir Razak: Rising likelihood of major reversal of hot money out from Asia
- MAHB sets May 2, 2014 as KLIA2 revised opening date
- Fitch Affirms Genting and Genting Singapore at 'A-'/ Stable
- Airsoft guns are easily available online

