A U.S. jury on Tuesday concluded that a former Haitian mayor should pay $15.5 million over allegations he led a brutal campaign against his political opponents that involved murdering and torturing them.
A federal jury in Boston found Jean Morose Viliena liable on claims arising out of a long-running lawsuit by three Haitian citizens who accused him of persecuting them or their relatives during his time as mayor of the rural town of Les Irois.
The civil case shed a light on the widespread violence that has plagued Haiti, where armed gangs have been expanding their territory, kidnappings have become frequent and gunbattles between police and crime groups are routine.
The $15.5 million awarded to David Boniface, Juders Yseme, and Nissage Martyr includes $11 million in punitive damages, according to their lawyers at the human rights group the Center for Justice and Accountability.
“Today’s verdict brings justice to me, my family, and the other families of those who have been victims of Viliena’s campaign of terror,” Boniface said in a statement.
Viliena, now a truck driver living in Massachusetts, denied wrongdoing, arguing he took no personal action against the plaintiffs. His lawyer did not respond to requests for comment.
The lawsuit was filed in 2017 under the Torture Victim Protection Act, which allows for U.S. lawsuits against foreign officials accused of extrajudicial killings or torture when avenues for redress in their home countries are exhausted.
The plaintiffs said Viliena in 2007 led a group of armed men to Boniface’s home who beat and fatally shot his brother and later mobilized a group in 2008 that beat and shot Martyr and Yseme at a community radio station.
Martyr lost a leg and Yseme was blinded in one eye. Martyr died in 2017 after suing. His son now serves as a plaintiff in his place.
The lawsuit also claimed Viliena in 2009 coordinated a mass arson of dozens of homes occupied by the plaintiffs and people associated with the political opposition in Les Irois, which is home to about 22,000 people.
Copyright 2023 Thomson/Reuters