
Former mayor from Haiti gets prison time for lying to get into the US
Jean Morose Viliena, of Malden, Massachusetts, was the mayor of Les Irois, Haiti, from December 2006 until February 2010. He was convicted of three counts of visa fraud in March and sentenced Friday in federal court in Boston.
'For more than a decade, he lived freely and comfortable in this country while the victims of his brutality lived in fear, exile and pain,' U.S. Attorney Leah Foley said in statement. 'Today's sentence brings a measure of justice for the lives he shattered and sends a clear message: the United States will not be a safe have for human rights abusers.'
According to prosecutors, Viliena committed 'violent atrocities' against his political foes in an isolated, rural community of about 22,000 residents on Haiti's western tip. In 2007, he was accused of leading a group of his allies to the home of a political opponent, where he and his associates shot and killed the opponent's younger brother, then smashed his skull with a rock.
In 2008, Viliena and his allies went armed with guns, machetes, picks and sledgehammers to shut down a community radio station that he opposed, prosecutors said. Authorities said he pistol-whipped and punched a man and ordered an associate to shoot and kill the man and another person.
Both survived, but one of the men lost a leg and the other was blinded in one eye.
When he applied for a visa to enter the U.S., however, Viliena denied having 'ordered, carried out or materially assisted in extrajudicial and political killings and other acts of violence against the Haitian people.' He later received a permanent resident card and has raised a child who is a U.S. citizen by birth, prosecutors said.
Defense attorneys argued in court that it was members of a rival political party — including some who they say are government witnesses — who committed the violence. They described the former mayor as the son of a farmer who became a teacher and eventually ran for mayor to improve conditions in town.
In 2023, Viliena was found liable by an American jury in a civil trial in connection with the killing and the two attempted killings and assessed $15.5 million in compensatory and punitive damages.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Wall Street Journal
an hour ago
- Wall Street Journal
Epstein Grand Jury Transcripts Will Remain Sealed, Judge Rules
A federal judge on Wednesday denied the Justice Department's request to unseal grand jury materials from its case against disgraced sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, saying the government had failed to identify any special circumstances in favor of making the secret documents public. U.S. District Judge Richard Berman in Manhattan wrote that the government had already assembled a trove of Epstein documents as part of its own investigation. 'The government is the logical party to make comprehensive disclosure to the public of the Epstein Files,' he wrote.


CBS News
an hour ago
- CBS News
Judge declines to unseal grand jury material in Jeffrey Epstein case
Washington — A federal judge in New York on Wednesday declined the federal government's request to unseal grand jury material in the case of Jeffrey Epstein, the convicted sex offender who died in federal custody in 2019. Judge Richard Berman of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York issued his ruling in a 14-page decision. Berman ruled that the Justice Department failed to demonstrate a "special circumstance" that would warrant the disclosure of grand jury transcripts and exhibits. Proceedings before grand juries are typically kept secret. This is a breaking news story and will be updated.


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Judge rejects Trump administration request to release Jeffrey Epstein grand jury documents
A federal judge said he would not unseal grand jury transcripts and evidence from the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein – rejecting the Justice Department's request to make them public. Judge Richard Berman said the Justice Department did not overcome long-standing precedent to keep grand jury materials sealed and noted that the information contained in the sealed materials is small relative to the entire investigation file already in DOJ's hands. 'The information contained in the Epstein grand jury transcripts pales in comparison to the Epstein investigation information and materials in the hand of the Department of Justice,' the judge wrote. The Justice Department declined to comment on Berman's ruling. This story is breaking and will be updated.