Cost of Elian saga keeps increasing, and there's no end in sight
Jerry Seper
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
The continuing battle over whether Elian Gonzalez
should be returned to Cuba with his father or remain in the United States
has cost millions of dollars — and the price tag will increase as the
saga continues.
Miami police have said the cost of keeping
order around Lazaro Gonzalez's bungalow in Miami's Little Havana — and
for
riot control after the 6-year-old was snatched from the house by federal
agents in a Saturday pre-dawn raid — could exceed
$5 million.
That includes police overtime pay and other
expenses, but not the damage from a day and a half of unrest in the city
after
the boy was seized.
Federal costs for the actual raid, in which
dozens of U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service officers and Border
Patrol
agents stormed the house and surrounded the property at 5:15 a.m.,
have not yet been calculated, but federal authorities
believe that total could also be sizable.
Montgomery County, Md., picked up the tab
for keeping order outside the Bethesda home of the Cuban Interests Section
chief, where Juan Miguel Gonzalez stayed for two weeks with his family.
Officer Derek Baliles said preliminary estimates
included $50,000 for overtime for police, but that at least two weeks of
new overtime claims have yet to be processed. He also said other costs,
including barricades, portable toilets, street sweepers
and trash pickup, have not yet been figured into the total.
Prince George's County, Md., was responsible
for guarding outside Andrews Air Force Base, where Elian and his family
stayed for four days. Cpl. Tim Estes said he expected those costs would
be tabulated "in the next few days."
Also, a number of additional local, federal
and Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority officers have been assigned
over the past several days to handle demonstrations outside the Cuban
Interests Section in Northwest Washington, the Justice
Department and at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
Bringing Elian Gonzalez to his father in Maryland
was the responsibility of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service.
INS spokeswoman Maria Cardona said the agency has not yet figured the
total costs involved.
The INS also will reimburse the U.S. Marshals
Service for the cost of the flight for Elian aboard a Marshals Service
jet to
Andrews, as well as the cost of providing security to Elian's father
and his family. That would include Coast Guard launches on
the Wye River to patrol the area where Elian is now staying on Maryland's
Eastern Shore and chase away those who come too
close to the 1,100-acre grounds.
The cost of putting the Juan Gonzalez family
up at the distinguished visitors unit at Andrews was about $40 a night,
which
also was paid by the INS. The rate is the same as that paid by military
and civilian guests.
It was not clear yesterday how much it was
going to cost the government to house the boy with his father, stepmother
and
half-brother at Carmichael Farm, the estate of the late Arthur A. Houghton
Jr. of New York-based Corning Inc. The family
was invited to stay at the estate by Mr. Houghton's widow, Nina, although
security costs for the visit will be borne by the
government.
The price of the Play-Doh given to Elian aboard
his flight to Washington to reduce stress was about $4, according to
Kmart.
The Elian saga also is expected to prove costly
to the General Board of Church and Society of the United Methodist
Church, which is paying some of the $400-an-hour fee of Washington
attorney Gregory B. Craig, who represents Juan Miguel
Gonzalez. According to the National Council of Churches, money has
been raised through a humanitarian fund established by
the board's executive committee to pay the fee — which is expected
to run about $100,000. The precise amount has not yet
been released.