Miami Herald

Airbnb is sued in Florida for listing property in Cuba confiscate­d by Castro decades ago

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com

A Florida physician is suing Airbnb, claiming the vacation rental company unlawfully profited from listing on its website a property that Fidel Castro’s government confiscate­d without paying compensati­on to his family decades ago, in what appears to be the first lawsuit alleging “traffickin­g” involving the business use of a residentia­l property on the island.

The lawsuit, filed on Monday in the Orlandobas­ed U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, argues that Airbnb profited from advertisin­g a rental in a six-apartment building in a leafy area in the Havana neighborho­od of Marianao that was originally owned by members of the Parreño family, including Alberto Parreño. In 1970, the Department of Justice’s Foreign Claims Settlement Commission certified Parreño’s claim to one-third of the land and building, valued at $547,365.24 at the time

Parreño, an American citizen, died in 1972. Javier Garcia-Bengochea, a cousin and the estate’s administra­tor, filed the lawsuit.

The suit says Airbnb continued listing the property between August 2019 and May 2022 after it was notified that it was subject to a claim and that the company “knowingly, voluntaril­y, intentiona­lly, and continuous­ly trafficked in the Property.” In a January 2022 story, the Miami Herald reported that

Airbnb had listed one apartment with high guest ratings in that building at least since 2017, according to the reviews. The company told the Herald at the time that it would investigat­e the allegation­s and take action, including removing the listing if it was found to violate the company’s policies. That listing is no longer appearing on the company’s website.

Airbnb did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Garcia-Bengochea, a Jacksonvil­le Cuban-American

neurosurge­on, actively lobbied Congress and several presidenti­al administra­tions to enforce a provision in the 1996 HelmsBurto­n Act, also known as the Libertad Act, that would allow the suing of companies with business in Cuba for “traffickin­g in confiscate­d property.” The right to sue had been suspended by every president since the law’s enactment but was reinstated by President Donald Trump.

There followed a flurry of lawsuits against American, foreign and Cuban government entities doing business involving confiscate­d properties, mostly hotels, mines, ports, airports and land. Most cases are still in litigation, including in appeals. Some lawsuits, including a previous one filed by Garcia-Bengochea against cruise companies that used port facilities in Santiago de Cuba seized from his family, have been dismissed or were lost on appeal over technicali­ties and questions about ownership. But in another case still in litigation and involving facilities at the port of Havana, several cruise companies were ordered to pay more than $400 million in compensati­on.

According to Airbnb’s website, the company advertises more than 1,000 places in Havana. The company started working in Cuba in 2015 during a period of improved U.S.Cuba relations. The U.S. Treasury Department imposed a fine on Airbnb in January 2022 for apparent violations of the U.S. embargo. At the time, Treasury warned companies about “entering new commercial markets, particular­ly one that has elevated sanctions risks such as Cuba, without fully anticipati­ng the complexiti­es of legally operating in a U.S.-sanctioned jurisdicti­on.”

Nora Gámez Torres: 305-376-2169, @ngameztorr­es

 ?? Courtesy of Javier Garcia-Bengochea ?? This six-apartment building in Havana was built by Javier Garcia-Bengochea’s family in 1939 and was confiscate­d without compensati­on by the Cuban government in 1960.
Courtesy of Javier Garcia-Bengochea This six-apartment building in Havana was built by Javier Garcia-Bengochea’s family in 1939 and was confiscate­d without compensati­on by the Cuban government in 1960.

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