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Haitian ex-mayor found guilty of lying about rights abuses to get US residency

FILE: In this photograph provided by attorney Ela Matthews, David Boniface, Nissage Martyr and Juders Yseme, from left, pose together in January 2014, in Haiti. Boniface, Yseme and Martyr鈥檚 son Nissandere are plaintiffs in a suit against former Les Irois, Haiti Mayor Jean Morose Viliena, who now lives in suburban Boston. The former mayor is accused of terrorizing his political opponents in a case that highlights the violent nature of Haiti鈥檚 politics and the lack of accountability. The trial begins Monday, March 13, 2023, in federal court in Boston.
Courtesy
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Ela Matthews/Center for Justice & Accountability via AP
FILE: In this photograph provided by attorney Ela Matthews, David Boniface, Nissage Martyr and Juders Yseme, from left, pose together in January 2014, in Haiti. Boniface, Yseme and Martyr鈥檚 son Nissandere are plaintiffs in a suit against former Les Irois, Haiti Mayor Jean Morose Viliena, who now lives in suburban Boston. The former mayor is accused of terrorizing his political opponents in a case that highlights the violent nature of Haiti鈥檚 politics and the lack of accountability. The trial begins Monday, March 13, 2023, in federal court in Boston.

BOSTON 鈥 A was found guilty on Friday for lying on his visa application about a series of politically motivated attacks against his opponents that left one dead and several people injured.

Jean Morose Viliena, who has been living just north of Boston in the city of Malden, Massachusetts, was indicted in 2023 on three counts of visa fraud. Authorities say he wrote on his application that he had not 鈥渙rdered, carried out or materially assisted in extrajudicial and political killings and other acts of violence against the Haitian people.鈥

Federal prosecutors said that while Viliena was mayor of the town of Les Irois 鈥 an isolated, rural community of about 22,000 on Haiti鈥檚 western tip 鈥 he committed 鈥渧iolent atrocities鈥 against his political foes. The impoverished community is only accessible by a dirt road that winds through the mountains. He faces a sentence of up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000.

In 2007, prosecutors said, Viliena led a group of his allies to the home of a political opponent, where he and his associates shot and killed the opponent鈥檚 younger brother, then smashed his skull with a rock.

Prosecutors also allege that in 2008, Viliena and his allies went armed with guns, machetes, picks and sledgehammers to shut down a community radio station that he opposed. Authorities said he pistol-whipped and punched a man and ordered an associate to shoot and kill the man and another person.

Both survived, but one of the men lost a leg and the other was blinded in one eye.

Defense attorneys argued in court that it was members of a rival political party 鈥 including some who they say are government witnesses 鈥 who committed the violence detailed in the charges against Viliena. They described the former mayor as the son of a farmer who became a teacher and eventually ran for mayor to improve conditions in town.

In 2023, Viliena was in connection with the killing and the two attempted killings and assessed $15.5 million in compensatory and punitive damages.

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