PRESS RELEASE
Judge finds Modesto man
liable for 1980 Assassination of Archbishop
Oscar Romero of El Salvador, Orders him to pay
$10 million in damages
Contact: Center for Justice
& Accountability
Fresno, September 3, 2004. Today at 5.45 pm,
Judge Wanger issued a historic decision holding
Modesto resident Alvaro Saravia responsible
for his role in the assassination of Archbishop
Oscar Romero of El Salvador as he was saying
mass on March 24, 1980. Judge Wanger ordered
Saravia to pay $10 million to the plaintiff,
a relative of the Archbishop, who has still
not been identified for security reasons.
Until today, no single individual has been
held responsible for the assassination, one
of the most heinous and shocking murders of
the last part of the 20th century.
In announcing the monetary award, Judge Wanger
stated that "the damages are of a magnitude
that is hardly describable."
Judge Wanger ruled that the evidence clearly
established Saravia’s responsibility for
organizing the murder. He also determined that
the murder constitutes a crime against a humanity,
because it was part of a widespread
and systematic attack intended to terrorize
a civilian population. As Judge Wanger stated:
"Here the evidence shows that there was
a consistent and unabating regime that was in
control of El Salvador, and that this regime
essentially functioned as a militarily-controlled
government." The government perpetrated
"systematic violations of human rights
for the purpose of perpetuating the oligarchy
and the military government."
He also concluded that what happened in El Salvador
was the "antithesis of due process"
and that there could not be a better example
of extrajudicial killing than the killing of
Archbishop Romero.
Judge Wanger’s ruling is one of the
few in the United States finding an invidual
liable for crimes against humanity. Such crimes
were first defined and condemned in 1945 in
the Nuremberg Charter, established to try Nazi
war
criminals. The novelty of crimes against humanity
is that they can be committed by a government
against its own citizens. In contrast, genocide
is widespread persecution directed against a
distinct people, defined by race,
ethnicity, or religion.
The case was brought by the Center for Justice
& Accountability (CJA), based in San Francisco,
together with the law firm of Heller Ehrman
White & McAuliffe.
Professor Patty Blum, CJA’s Senior Legal
Advisor, commented: “With this victory,
U.S. courts join with national and international
courts throughout the world in recognizing that
egregious acts -- so atrocious that we label
them crimes against all humanity -- must not
go unpunished. Judge Wanger has provided Salvadorans,
both in El Salvador and here in the U.S., with
a measure of justice denied to them in their
own country, for the loss of
their most beloved leader, who was truly the
voice of the voiceless during one of El Salvador’s
darkest times.
“This decision ensures that the United
States will no longer be a safe haven for those
responsible for this heinous crime,” said
Matthew Eisenbrandt, CJA’s Litigation
Director. "This verdict provides sufficient
grounds for the
immigration service to place Saravia in deportation
proceedings."
Lead counsel Nicholas van Aelstyn, a partner
with Heller Ehrman White & McAuliffe, added:
"Archbishop Romero's legacy is great and
yet also paradoxical. He is revered around the
world as one of the foremost figures
of non-violence whose powerful advocacy of human
rights was rooted in a deep respect for the
dignity of all human beings. Yet at the same
time, his is the paradigmatic case of impunity.
Despite all the evidence, no one has
been held accountable in the 24 years since
he was killed."
Co-counsel Russell Cohen of Heller Ehrman
stated: "This case builds on the efforts
of people around the world to counter impunity
with accountability and ultimately to bring
justice for and in El Salvador. The case is
part of
a world-wide movement that includes the Chilean
Supreme Court's decision that Pinochet must
stand trial for his crimes. What these cases
are saying is that justice is needed if reconciliation
and the rule of law are to take
root."
Other comments:
Prof. Terry Karl of Stanford University, who
testified at the trial as an expert witness,
stated:
“El Salvador’s civil war was framed
by the murder of priests. The murder of Archbishop
Romero was one of the major catalysts that pushed
the country into war and the murder of six Jesuit
priests on November 16, 1989 was one
of the major catalysts that brought about the
peace agreement. One of the Jesuits who was
killed, Fr Ignacio Martin Baro, used to tell
me that the worst thing that could happen was
not the murder of Archbishop Romero or his
burial, but that he would die over and over
again if the truth were buried with him. Today
we have the satisfaction of knowing that more
of the truth was told and acknowledged by a
court of the United States.”
Juan Carlos Cristales, Executive Director
of El Rescate in Los Angeles, one of the leading
organizations in the U.S. that defends the rights
of Central Americans, commented: “The
assassination of Archbishop Oscar Romero was
one
of the most shocking atrocities in our recent
history. As long as that crime was allowed to
go unpunished, any crime was conceivable. This
case has said “No!” to impunity.
There are consequences for such acts –
maybe not yet in
El Salvador, but in the U.S. and elsewhere.
I believe that the success of this case will
give support to efforts in El Salvador to repeal
the 1993 Amnesty law.”
Dr. Francisco Acosta, a witness at the trial
whose life was saved by Archbishop Romero and
who founded the Archbishop Romero University
in El Salvador, stated: “For us, Oscar
Romero was like Martin Luther King for the
United States, or Gandhi for India. I knew that
the opportunity to tell the truth in a legal
court of the most powerful country in the world
will help to provide a sense of closure for
all of Salvadoran society. At last, steps have
been taken to reverse impunity for human rights
violators. At the personal level, I feel a strong
sense of healing and closure. For almost 25
years, I have carried a bag of heavy rocks with
me everywhere I go. Today, I have left this
bag of rocks with the U.S. system of justice.”
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