Miami Herald (Sunday)

Trip to the Dominican Republic turns into a vacation from hell

‘WE’VE LOST EVERYTHING’

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES AND KEVIN G. HALL jcharles@miamiheral­d.com khall@mcclatchyd­c.com

Three Haitian emigres from South Florida went on an eight-day vacation to the Dominican Republic. Nearly a year later, they are still there with scant support from the U.S. government to get them home even though one is a U.S. citizen and two others are green card holders.

It was supposed to be an eight-day getaway, a chance for three South Florida brothers to reconnect with family living in the Dominican Republic amid coronaviru­s lockdowns and quarantine.

But four days in, the trip in late July 2020 turned into the yearlong vacation from hell. Now the three brothers hope that a hearing on July 5 may finally lead to their ticket back home.

The Nalus brothers — three Haitian émigrés who live in Delray Beach — have lost jobs and maybe even a college scholarshi­p. Florida drivers’ licenses have been suspended and cars repossesse­d.

Even worse, the U.S. immigratio­n status of two of the brothers hangs in the balance after all were arrested last Aug. 2 and detained in the Dominican Republic with scant support from the U.S. government.

There seems to have been little official public push to help the South Florida brothers, despite the fact that one is a U.S. citizen. The other two brothers are permanent residents of the United States. Still, their case may be a test of the United States’ willingnes­s to implement a new law, the Robert Levinson Hostage Recovery and Hostage-Taking Accountabi­lity Act, designed to force greater U.S. government interventi­on on behalf of U.S. nationals being wrongly detained abroad.

Named in honor of the former FBI agent from Coral Springs, the landmark Levinson Act became law in December. It establishe­d 11 determinat­ions to be used in deciding whether a detention overseas is wrongful, at which time a U.S. government response is supposed to be triggered. More than five weeks after the Nalus family made the request of the Biden administra­tion, however, no determinat­ion has yet been made.

The Nalus brothers allege they were set up with a four-pound package of marijuana planted in their white Hyundai Tucson rental car.

Dominican prosecutor­s have not moved on their case and they’ve been stuck in limbo. Three times, scheduled court hearings didn’t happen, they say, after the Dominican prosecutor failed to show up in court. The men are out of jail but can’t leave the country.

“We’ve lost everything: jobs, cars, everything,” said Lonelson Nalus, who said the group included his two brothers from Florida, and an older brother and a friend who live in the Dominican Republic. “It’s really hard being [in] a country that we came to for the first time, for eight days, and we don’t speak the language.”

For the Nalus family, lives and livelihood­s have been put on hold, and in many ways upended.

Lonelson, 25, faces turning 26 on the island the country shares with his native Haiti, awaiting an outcome. His brother John Nalus, 21, was supposed to attend Auburn University at Montgomery, Alabama, on a soccer scholarshi­p. But he may miss out for a second straight year at Auburn.

Lovinsky Nalus, 27, had his car repossesse­d after their dad couldn’t continue making the payments. He has also been unable to see his 4-year-old daughter in Delray Beach.

Meanwhile, a fourth brother, Djhonson, 33, had temporaril­y moved to the Dominican Republic to escape the violence in Haiti. He was waiting there until returning to Haiti for a U.S. embassy interview for permission to travel to the U.S. That interview was scheduled for August 2020, and because of the arrest, he was unable to make his appointmen­t and the status of his applicatio­n is now

allegedly containing marijuana being planted under their rental car as they await a tow truck. The young men protest in English and Haitian Creole.

What the videos don’t show, say the men, is what happened once they were taken into custody.

“They asked if we had money,” said Lonelson, adding that all had guns put to their head, and police took a suitcase with clothes and $500 they had inside the vehicle. “When we went to court, the judge just said we have three months to come back to court. We said, ‘What?’ That’s when I called the embassy and circulated the video.”

Public records show that the three young men have no criminal history in the U.S. They were working, playing club soccer and in the case of the youngest, John, preparing to head off to college when they purchased discounted airfares and went on vacation on July 29, 2020.

“We’ve never been in that situation before, dealing with the police, getting arrested. We were crying,” Lonelson said in a cellphone interview from

Boca Chica, located near the Dominican capital of Santo Domingo.

The brothers worried about how the news would hit their hardworkin­g father, Calice Nalus, 57, who sacrificed a law career in Haiti to work as a landscaper in Palm Beach County so they could build a new life after Haiti’s devastatin­g earthquake in 2010.

“He knows we don’t do stuff like that,” Lonelson said.

Before their problems, the boys contribute­d to the family’s finances, paying bills and sending money to their mother in Haiti. They must now rely on their father to help with their $200 monthly rent in Santo Domingo, legal bills and food expenses.

“Sometimes, he can’t,” Lonelson Nalus said.

A FATHER’S STRUGGLES

The elder Nalus estimates that he has spent about $40,000 — money that he has had to borrow — to pay for lawyers and support his sons.

“If they had died, I would have needed to bury them,” he said, emphasizin­g he is the only financial support for his children other than some money from a GoFundme page. “Their mother isn’t here. She’s in Haiti. I am mother, father. I am everything for them.”

The situation has been difficult on everyone, said Calice, who also cares for a 16-year-old son and 13-year-old daughter at his home in Delray Beach and has Lovinsky’s 4-year-old daughter in the house too. The younger children ask when the young men will return, a question Calice quietly poses for himself.

“My children are innocent and they were imprisoned. They do not know why they are detained,” he insisted, hoping U.S. authoritie­s will finally intervene on their behalf.

That his sons are Haitian likely played an important factor, Calice believes, because of longstandi­ng “anti-Haitianism­o” sentiment in the Dominican Republic.

“If the children were not Haitian, I don’t think they would do this because they have evidence in their hands,” he said. “We have visible proof in our hands for everyone to see.”

Calice first heard about his sons’ arrest after someone saw a photo posted on social media, claiming that they had been taken into custody after crossing the border from Haiti with cocaine.

Soon, he received a video showing the boys sitting on the ground in handcuffs. He was angry, wondering how it all happened. He looked for anyone who could help in the Dominican Republic.

When he finally located the young men, he wired $5,000 to a lawyer, hoping it would quickly get them back to Florida.

Then he sent another $5,000.

“This situation hits me hard to this day. There are times I can’t sleep because I am thinking about this,” he said. “I never thought something like this could have happened to them.”

Calice thought the boys’ video, showing the package being placed under their car by another man who randomly showed up at the scene with three other individual­s, would be enough to exonerate them.

“You don’t need to be on the scene to understand what occurred,” he said. “The video clearly shows you where the people came with the package in their hands, and where they bent down and placed it under the car and where they took it again and placed it on the dash and they took it to over where the tow truck was, opened the door and then they pulled a gun on the young men.”

WHERE’S THE HELP?

Three prior scheduled hearings for the brothers — on Jan. 14, March 8 and then again on May 3 — were canceled when prosecutor­s didn’t show up. A fourth try is scheduled for July 5, and their new lawyer, their second, is confident prosecutor­s will finally appear as required.

“We are doing everything possible,” said Yonatan Familia Peralta, their lawyer, cautioning that the July 5 court date deals only with authentica­ting their cell videos and returning their passports, an order issued by a judge but ignored by prosecutor­s.

Only after an inquiry by the Herald and the McClatchy Washington Bureau did Dominican Attorney General Miriam Germán Brito on Tuesday suddenly move on the case, though it was only an inquiry to the prosecutor’s office about the return of the men’s passports and cellphones, according to a letter the Herald obtained.

On Wednesday, Peralta contacted Lonelson Nalus and told him to come to his office on Thursday afternoon because the prosecutor was going to bring the passports, green cards and two cellphones. He said they needed to bring the cellphones to him at 11 a.m. Monday with the two cellphones that have the videos of the incident.

The wheels of justice grind slowly in the Dominican Republic, which depends heavily on tourism and which prior to the global coronaviru­s pandemic welcomed a record 604,977 foreign tourists in just the first two months of 2019.

But unlike other incidents of Americans held for petty crimes where the U.S. embassy staff got involved, nobody rode in to the rescue even though the former U.S. ambassador, Robin Bernstein, had asked embassy staff to inform her of arrests of Floridians.

In an interview, Bernstein said she was never made aware of the brothers’ situation. Bernstein only learned about it after reading about it earlier this year while back home in Florida. She later contacted a friend of the boys to offer her assistance.

Although the State Department said its embassy in Santo Domingo was first informed of Lonelson Nalus’ arrest on Aug. 13, 2020, the brothers’ plight got no attention when Secretary of State Michael Pompeo visited on Aug. 16 to attend the inaugurati­on of new Dominican President Luis Abinader.

“I am worried about the boys’ due process,” said Bernstein, who left her post this past January. “They should have had at least a hearing.”

The trio’s arrest in August happened as the U.S. was being locked down because of waves of coronaviru­s deaths, and the Dominican Republic was preparing to welcome a new incoming administra­tion and prosecutor­s after holding presidenti­al elections.

“Unfortunat­ely, I think that when the arrests took place things were in transit,” Bernstein said.

She said that if the young men cannot get a hearing in the Dominican Republic, then the U.S. should request that they be sent home.

“A year is too long not to have a hearing. The fact that the prosecutor failed to show up is grounds even for dismissal,” said Bernstein.

HOSTAGE-LIKE SCENARIO

In its 2020 Human Rights report, the State Department noted that arbitrary arrest and detention were problems in the Dominican Republic.

The Nalus brothers’ cause has been taken up by the James W. Foley Legacy Foundation after a family friend reached out on their behalf. The foundation, named after a journalist kidnapped in Syria and later slain, advocates for the release of U.S. citizens, dual nationals and permanent residents kidnapped or unlawfully detained in foreign countries.

The group has reached out to the State Department about the Nalus brothers and is still waiting on a determinat­ion, said Cynthia Loertscher, its director of research.

“We remain concerned because the Nalus brothers were accused of a crime they didn’t commit and there is evidence to support their innocence,” she said.

A State Department official told the Herald and the McClatchy Washington Bureau that they are aware that Lonelson Nalus was released from detention on Sept. 16, 2020, but is currently subject to exit restrictio­ns in Santo Domingo on charges of drug traffickin­g. The official made no mention of the green-card holding brothers.

“We remain in contact with Mr. Nalus and his representa­tives,” the official said, adding that the embassy is providing “all appropriat­e consular services.”

The State Department added that in a foreign country, U.S. citizens are subject to that country’s laws, even if they differ from those in the United States.

“Consular officers provide a list of local lawyers, but cannot provide legal advice or effect the release of arrested U.S. citizens. We cannot represent U.S. citizens in foreign courts,“the official said.

However, that is in stark contrast to another case two years ago when five armed Americans and two Serbians, at least one of whom was a green-card holder, were arrested in neighborin­g Haiti with a cache of automatic rifles and pistols and the U.S. embassy and State Department intervened to help secure their release and return to the U.S.

Also, the State Department has raised concerns about human rights activist Paul

Rusesabagi­na, a Belgian citizen and U.S. permanent resident, who claims he was abducted in August 2020 by the Rwandan government to stand trial on terrorism charges. Rusesabagi­na was a hotel manager in Rwanda in 1994 during the country’s genocide and has been credited with saving hundreds of ethnic Tutsis. His heroism inspired the film “Hotel Rwanda.”

Earlier this year, Rusesabagi­na’s family acknowledg­ed that they were among the kin of Americans held hostage or wrongly detained abroad who were invited on a call with Secretary of State Anthony Blinken. During the call Blinken mentioned the Levinson Act and “reaffirmed that the United States is committed to seeking the release of their loved ones,” a State Department spokesman told journalist­s on Feb. 2.

Loertscher, the James

W. Foley Legacy Foundation director, called the Nalus brothers “your average American tourists,” and said the foundation believes the trio is being “unlawfully and wrongfully detained” under criteria for the

Levinson Act.

Levinson disappeare­d in Iran in 2007 and is presumed dead. Three new entities were created in the executive branch under the act, including a special State Department envoy for hostage matters. The Levinson Act says it applies to U.S. nationals. This includes U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents “with significan­t ties to the

United States,” who the State Department determines are being held “unlawfully or wrongfully.”

The Nalus brothers’ detention appears to meet several criteria for a Levinson Act designatio­n. These include a lack of due process rendering detention arbitrary, violations of a country’s own laws and credible informatio­n about innocence and support from independen­t nongovernm­ental organizati­ons who advocate on their behalf.

A State Department spokespers­on confirmed that no Levinson Act determinat­ion has been made yet about the men.

Nearly a year into the saga, the boys and their dad hope next week’s hearing offers the hope of a process that finally leads to their return home and getting their lives back.

“The kids don’t smoke, they don’t gamble, they don’t drink rum, it’s only soccer that they participat­e in, along with their jobs and schooling,” Calice, their father, said. “They’ve never been in anything like this. There are people who don’t trust their kids. I trust mine.”

McClatchy Washington

Bureau Senior National Security and White House Correspond­ent Michael Wilner contribute­d. to this report.

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com ?? Top, Calice Nalus, 57, of Delray Beach, shows a newspaper clipping of one of his sons’ soccer accomplish­ments, and above, a photo of his son, Lonelson, 25. He and two brothers left South Florida for an eight-day vacation in the Dominican Republic on July 29, 2020. Nearly a year later, they are still detained after being arrested on what the men say are false allegation­s of drug traffickin­g.
PHOTOS BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com Top, Calice Nalus, 57, of Delray Beach, shows a newspaper clipping of one of his sons’ soccer accomplish­ments, and above, a photo of his son, Lonelson, 25. He and two brothers left South Florida for an eight-day vacation in the Dominican Republic on July 29, 2020. Nearly a year later, they are still detained after being arrested on what the men say are false allegation­s of drug traffickin­g.
 ?? Miami ?? After an inquiry by the Miami Herald and the McClatchy Washington Bureau about the Nalus brothers’ arrest, the attorney general for the Dominican Republic finally asked about the case. This is the response of the prosecutor’s office.
Miami After an inquiry by the Miami Herald and the McClatchy Washington Bureau about the Nalus brothers’ arrest, the attorney general for the Dominican Republic finally asked about the case. This is the response of the prosecutor’s office.

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