Chicago Sun-Times

LOPEZ RIVERA FREE

Cheered in Puerto Rico, expected in Chicago this week

- BY CARLOS RIVERA GIUSTI AND DAVID MCFADDEN

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Puerto Rico nationalis­t Oscar Lopez Rivera emerged from house arrest Wednesday and was celebrated by supporters after decades in custody, freed in a case that made him a martyr for some but angered those who lost loved ones in a string of bombings.

Wearing black jeans and a shirt decorated with a Puerto Rican flag pin, the 74- year- old left his daughter’s San Juan home escorted by the mayor of Puerto Rico’s capital and New York City Council Speaker Melissa Mark- Viverito.

A celebratio­n for Lopez near the University of Puerto Rico drew at least 1,000 people by late afternoon, some embracing and wearing T- shirts reading: “Welcome to your homeland!”

Lopez was considered a top leader of the Armed Forces of National Liberation, or FALN, an ultranatio­nalist Puerto Rican group that claimed responsibi­lity for more than 100 bombings at government buildings, department stores, banks and restaurant­s in New York, Chicago, Washington and Puerto Rico in the 1970s and early 1980s. The FBI classified the Marxist- Leninist group as a terrorist organizati­on.

The most famous bombing was the still- unsolved 1975 explosion that killed four people and wounded 60 at Fraunces Tavern, a landmark restaurant in New York’s financial district.

Lopez, a Vietnam War veteran who moved from Puerto Rico to Chicago as a child, wasn’t convicted of any role in the bombings that killed six people and injured dozens. But those who lost loved ones hold him responsibl­e.

“This guy was convicted of leading the FALN that murdered people,” said Joseph Connor, whose father, Frank, was killed in the Fraunces Tavern attack.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Lopez said he had no regrets about his involvemen­t with the FALN. But he stressed that “the issue of violence is discarded completely” by Puerto Rican “independen­tistas” and he described their struggle as a peaceful one for many years.

“Whatever we did, whatever was done, whatever the struggle called for in the 1970s is not there today. We have evolved, the conditions in Puerto Rico have changed,” he told AP.

Lopez is expected to be feted in Chicago’s Humboldt Park later this week. Supporters also plan to honor him at the June 11 Puerto Rican Day parade along New York’s Fifth Avenue.

 ?? | CARLOS GIUSTI/ AP ?? Puerto Rican nationalis­t Oscar Lopez Rivera gestures as he is released from home confinemen­t after 36 years in federal custody, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Wednesday.
| CARLOS GIUSTI/ AP Puerto Rican nationalis­t Oscar Lopez Rivera gestures as he is released from home confinemen­t after 36 years in federal custody, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Wednesday.

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