chicagotribune.com
Haiti judge recommends 10 US missionaries detained on kidnapping charges be released
FRANK BAJAK
Associated Press Writer
10:36 AM CST, February 11, 2010
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — The Haitian judge deciding whether 10 U.S. missionaries should face trial on charges of trying to take a busload of children out of the country said Thursday he will recommend that they be released.
Judge Bernard Saint-Vil must now send his recommendation to the prosecutor, who may agree or object, but the judge has the final authority to decide whether they stay in custody or go free.
Saint-Vil made his recommendation a day after questioning the Americans and hearing testimony from parents who said they willingly gave their children to the Baptist missionaries, believing they would educate and care for them.
“After listening to the families, I see the possibility that they can all be released,” Saint-Vil told The Associated Press. “I am recommending that all 10 Americans be released.”
He would not elaborate, and it was not clear whether his decision means the charges may be dropped.
Gary Lassade, an attorney for one of the Americans, said he expects the judge to issue a final decision later Thursday recommending the case be dropped entirely, though the prosecutor could appeal that ruling.
The Americans, most from an Idaho Baptist group, were charged last week with child kidnapping and criminal association after being arrested Jan. 29 while trying to take 33 children, ages 2 to 12, across the border to an orphanage they were trying to set up in the Dominican Republic.
The following day, group leader Laura Silsby of Meridian, Idaho, told the AP that the children were obtained either from orphanages or from distant relatives. She said only children who were found not to have living parents or relatives who could care for them might be put up for adoption.
However, at least 20 of the children are from a single village and have living parents. Some of the parents told the AP they willingly turned over their children to the missionaries on the promise the Americans would educate them and let relatives visit.
In a brief conversation afterward through cell bars in the stuffy, grimy jail where they have been held, the missionaries refused to be interviewed by the AP.
“We’ve said all we’re going to say for now. We don’t want to talk now,” Silsby said. “Maybe tomorrow.”
The women were held separately from the men, who shared their cell with nine Haitian men, some of whom played checkers on the cell floor.
“We will not talk unless our lawyer is present,” said Paul Thompson, pastor of the Eastside Baptist Church in Twin Falls, Idaho. Lassade represents Thompson’s cousin, Jim Allen of Amarillo, Texas.
A Dallas attorney for Allen, Hiram Sasser, told the AP that his client was recruited just 48 hours before the group left last month for the Dominican Republic on what Silsby termed an emergency rescue mission.
“He did not know many of the other people who were on the mission trip, or what other people were going to do, or about paperwork,” Sasser said.
Silsby had decided last summer to create an orphanage in the Dominican Republic and in November registered the nonprofit New Life Children’s Refuge foundation in Idaho.
After Haiti’s catastrophic Jan. 12 earthquake, she accelerated the plan and recruited her fellow missionaries. Silsby told the AP she was only interested in saving suffering children.
She told the AP after her arrest, however, that she did not have all the Haitian papers required to take the children out of the country.
A Dominican diplomat told the AP he warned her that without those papers she could be arrested.
Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
My hope is that the Haitian judge does not release the 10 let them stay in the pen until the truth comes out some more. The truth is that those 10 are among a group of child predators that are operating in the U.S.. Donot let them go. They had to many children and many had parents and told the kidnappers that they did. Please help us stop kiddy porn, child sex crimes, crimes against children, kidnappers and such like matters. Keep our children safe.
We should be in outrage about what happened to those innocent little ones in Haiti. The ten must stay in the pen. They had something up their sleeves besides their arm. We cannot let these people, 10 people, get away with what we know was a crime. When will we see that our children are in danger. The 10 are child predators working within the black market. By now the girl may have been raped already and maybe killed. Keep them in jail. Lets find out the real deal.