Tacoma's Puracal wins appeal; will be freed from Nicaraguan prison
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MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) - The lawyer for a U.S. citizen jailed for nearly two years on money-laundering and drug charges in Nicaragua says he will be freed after unanimously winning an appeal.
Attorney Fabbrith Gomez says an appeals court vacated the charges against 35-year-old Jason Puracal of Tacoma, Washington, and ordered him released immediately.
"We are happy, everyone that worked for this is happy," he said.
Gomez said it could be a matter of hours or days before the American who worked as a real estate agent in Nicaragua is released from the prison right outside Managua, the capital. He said the three-judge panel also ordered the release of the other defendants in the case.
The court was supposed to have announced its ruling by Sept. 4, according to Nicaraguan law, but Gomez said he wasn't notified until Wednesday.
Eric Volz, managing director for the Los Angeles-based David House Agency that helped Puracal file petitions and publicize the case, said the order for his release had not been handed over to the prison.
"The family is thrilled to hear the news that they are another huge step closer to bringing Jason home," Volz said in an emailed statement. "There is one thing we have known all along over the past two years: Jason is innocent. The annulment of the oral and public trial is testament to this fact."
Details of the decision to free Puracal were not immediately available. There was no immediate confirmation from court officials.
Gomez had argued to the appeals court that Puracal's home sales were legitimate business deals and were not related in any way to drug traffickers.
The University of Washington graduate made the Pacific coast surfing town of San Juan del Sur his home after a two-year stint in Nicaragua with the Peace Corps. He married a Nicaraguan woman and they had a son with Down syndrome in March 2007.
Puracal was featured in a 2007 episode of HGTV's "House Hunters International" showing beachfront homes to Americans. The same year he got a Re/Max real estate franchise with three other Americans living in Nicaragua.
On Nov. 11, 2010, masked policeman carrying AK-47 assault rifles raided his real estate office and took him to Nicaragua's maximum-security prison. Prosecutors charged that Puracal was using his business as a front for money laundering in a region used to transport cocaine from Colombia to the United States.
He was convicted in August 2011 of all charges and later sentenced to 22 years in prison.
Puracal's family and friends and human rights groups maintained the charges were false. Seeing the case marred with inconsistencies, U.S. lawmakers supported Puracal by sending letters to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega asking to intervene.
Defense attorneys complained the judge who convicted Puracal and 10 other defendants was not fully certified with Nicaragua's Supreme Court and had just been appointed.
Gomez also said that if authorities had been building a strong case against Puracal years before his arrest, as they claimed, he wouldn't have obtained his residency from the Nicaraguan government days before the arrest.
The U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention had ruled that Puracal should have been freed because he had not received a fair trial and was arrested illegally in a raid conducted without a warrant.
Puracal's family claimed that he was suffering from unsanitary conditions at La Modelo prison and was denied food, drinking water and medical care. They said he lost more than 40 pounds before he was moved earlier this year to solitary confinement.
The David House Agency helped Puracal's family navigate international justice. Volz, the founder, was convicted in Nicaragua of the 2006 strangling death of his ex-girlfriend but absolved by an appeals court and released from prison.
Attorney Fabbrith Gomez says an appeals court vacated the charges against 35-year-old Jason Puracal of Tacoma, Washington, and ordered him released immediately.
"We are happy, everyone that worked for this is happy," he said.
Gomez said it could be a matter of hours or days before the American who worked as a real estate agent in Nicaragua is released from the prison right outside Managua, the capital. He said the three-judge panel also ordered the release of the other defendants in the case.
The court was supposed to have announced its ruling by Sept. 4, according to Nicaraguan law, but Gomez said he wasn't notified until Wednesday.
Eric Volz, managing director for the Los Angeles-based David House Agency that helped Puracal file petitions and publicize the case, said the order for his release had not been handed over to the prison.
"The family is thrilled to hear the news that they are another huge step closer to bringing Jason home," Volz said in an emailed statement. "There is one thing we have known all along over the past two years: Jason is innocent. The annulment of the oral and public trial is testament to this fact."
Details of the decision to free Puracal were not immediately available. There was no immediate confirmation from court officials.
Gomez had argued to the appeals court that Puracal's home sales were legitimate business deals and were not related in any way to drug traffickers.
The University of Washington graduate made the Pacific coast surfing town of San Juan del Sur his home after a two-year stint in Nicaragua with the Peace Corps. He married a Nicaraguan woman and they had a son with Down syndrome in March 2007.
Puracal was featured in a 2007 episode of HGTV's "House Hunters International" showing beachfront homes to Americans. The same year he got a Re/Max real estate franchise with three other Americans living in Nicaragua.
On Nov. 11, 2010, masked policeman carrying AK-47 assault rifles raided his real estate office and took him to Nicaragua's maximum-security prison. Prosecutors charged that Puracal was using his business as a front for money laundering in a region used to transport cocaine from Colombia to the United States.
He was convicted in August 2011 of all charges and later sentenced to 22 years in prison.
Puracal's family and friends and human rights groups maintained the charges were false. Seeing the case marred with inconsistencies, U.S. lawmakers supported Puracal by sending letters to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega asking to intervene.
Defense attorneys complained the judge who convicted Puracal and 10 other defendants was not fully certified with Nicaragua's Supreme Court and had just been appointed.
Gomez also said that if authorities had been building a strong case against Puracal years before his arrest, as they claimed, he wouldn't have obtained his residency from the Nicaraguan government days before the arrest.
The U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention had ruled that Puracal should have been freed because he had not received a fair trial and was arrested illegally in a raid conducted without a warrant.
Puracal's family claimed that he was suffering from unsanitary conditions at La Modelo prison and was denied food, drinking water and medical care. They said he lost more than 40 pounds before he was moved earlier this year to solitary confinement.
The David House Agency helped Puracal's family navigate international justice. Volz, the founder, was convicted in Nicaragua of the 2006 strangling death of his ex-girlfriend but absolved by an appeals court and released from prison.
"Prosecutors charged that Puracal was using his business as a front for money laundering..."
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Translation: prosecutors wanted some "legal" basis to STEAL his money and a way to launder a bunch of their own.
Great news!!!!
This is the best news I have read after a long long time. Amanda Knox was freed around this time last year. Congratulations Mr. Puracal. Can't wait to see you back home.Â
What if he was a front for money laundering but just refused to pay off the right people?
My sister married one of the guys our Special Forces trained up down there. Looking terrified probably saved his life on day 1.
I love how these things always take FOREVER! like that chick that was incarcerated in europe and just got out recently. I don't remember how long she was in prison there but it's insane!
Nicaragua has a corrupted system at every level and nothing gets resolved in a few hours. A lot of behind the scene work has been done and certain people received incentives (?) for a speedy trial. I am glad the resolution was in favor of Mr. Puracal. Welcome home!
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Now would be a great time to investigate other places to live, out of country of course.
I remember when Reagan was president and we went down there and kidnapped their president and brought him here and put him in prison. hmmmm
@Alikelystorey That was Panama, not Nicaragua...and it was during the administration of George HW Bush.Â
 @70MonteCarlo We didn't do the dirty work ourselves directly, but Reagan-era CIA (headed by HW Bush) funded and trained the right-wing Contras to overthrow Daniel Ortega using money from arm sales to Iran - hence the infamous Iran-Contra scandal.
Glad to hear this.
So happy to hear that he won his appeal, hopefully he, his wife and their son can now move back to the states and begin to rebuild their lives.
 @alaska_dreamin The way we treat non-whites who speak spanish in this country? The guy would be crazy to move his family here.
 @Fooey Patooey!  @alaska_dreamin I agree with your comment. I live in Lacey, WA and my husband is German and El Salvadorian, so my kids have a natural TAN...and they don't even speak Spanish & we are well off. We get looked at like we are dogs and my kids are called horrible racial slurs in school. Hopefully this man does not move his family back here to Washington. He is much better off staying in one of those countries.
@Lara @Fooey @alaska_dreamin @jellyfish @Socialjusticeforall I've been called worse - get over it. We are all tired of you crybabies.
 @70MonteCarlo  @Lara  @Fooey  @alaska_dreamin @jellyfish Monte you also have the freedom of not reading these comments if you do not like our "whining". @jellyfish You must be right! That MUST be it =) I'll get right on that teaching my preschooler and 1st grader not to be telling people that were well off because that's why my first grader was called a spick =) Thank so much for informing me. @Socialjusticeforall I'm not sure where you lived in NV but we are from Vegas, and there is no room for any racism crap. With 90% of the people that live in Vegas are from california, there is far too much diversity for anyone to be racist.
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@Lara @Fooey Patooey! @alaska_dreamin This isn't East Germany. You have freedom of movement. Feel free to excercise that right and move to El Salvador if it is so terrible here. Enough whining.
Oops, meant maybe your kids, not maybe your friends.
@Barlion @sunnysandiego @Lara @Fooey Patooey! @alaska_dreamin I wouldn't say most Americans. There are racist people everywhere and of every nationality. Saying that you're well off is not necessary to make your point. People who are not well off can also be properly groomed and well-mannered. I have kids in high school and their friends are all different colors and backgrounds and everyone hangs out together. Maybe your friends have not made new friends yet but I know there are kids willing to be their friends and maybe if they are picked on it is not because of their skin color but maybe they tell kids in school that they are well off.
 @sunnysandiego  @Lara  @Fooey Patooey!  @alaska_dreamin Mentioning that you are well off is pertinent because most Americans look at hispanics as poor, lazy, uneducated fools who should only be gardeners and little else.
@Lara @sunnysandiego @Fooey Patooey! @alaska_dreamin
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You are so wrong about Washington. I am a person of color and actually have been treated very well. There are racist people but Nevada is really bad. I know this because I lived there. Still in NV I have many non-Latino friends just as I have here. I would say, it is more about how you and perhaps your children don't try to belong here that is the issue. Â
 @sunnysandiego  @Fooey Patooey!  @alaska_dreamin Sunny I mentioned we are well off because it doesn't matter that my children are well groomed and well mannered, they are still looked at like the scum of society because of our skin color here in Washington. My husband moved us here from Nevada because he was offered a IT job in Seattle which we jumped at. I have never been treated so poorly and would move back if Nevada wasn't #1 on the unemployment rate.
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Just thought I'd share my two cents on how this man is better off not moving to the states. Sorry if I offended you.
 @Lara  @Fooey Patooey!  @alaska_dreamin Any doubts about how they are treated read the comments in here from the racist keyboard hiding fools.
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and BTW the fact that you mention you are well off not sure why that is pertinent. Â If you were not well off do you deserve to be treated differently?
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No one should be subjected to being treated differently for no reason regardless of anything. Â That is all that needs to be said.
 @Fooey Patooey! I don't know how safe it will be for him to keep his family down there.
 @alaska_dreamin Nicaragua is not the only country in Central & South America.
Good to see this man was released. How did this guy end up being prosecuted and having to serve 20+ years in prison without proper evidence? Let's just hope the Nicaraguan court system has learned from this and will make changes in their decision making process.
I am always disgusted that this plan to falsely prosecute this American started with the police and went as far as a trial without evidence and he was sentenced to 22 years in prison.  I would like to know what assets were siezed including his bank accounts. Â
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This is outrageous. We should send a strong message to Nicaragua when their courts are convicting Americans without evidence. Â
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But then I remember all the prisoners we are holding indefinitely without enough evidence to go to trial at Gitmo and I realize The US is leading by example. Â
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Oh well, Â Glad he is free. Â I would never go back. Â
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Happy to hear some good news today. What a relief!
I'm glad to hear of his release!
While he has the chance, he should buy a one way ticket to the USA and never return to Nicaragua.
Finally! Some very good news!
OUTSTANDING!! Best story/news of the day.