By Karen DeYoung
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday , March 9, 2000 ; A26
Washington attorney Gregory B. Craig, who represented President Clinton
during his impeachment and trial, has been hired by
the Cuban father of 6-year-old Elian Gonzalez to represent him in this
country in his efforts to be reunited with his son.
Craig and a Spanish-speaking associate met "alone and privately" with
Juan Miguel Gonzalez late last week in Cuba, according
to a statement from their law firm, Williams and Connolly. "We are
satisfied that Mr. Gonzalez is not being coerced in any way
in his desire to be reunited" with Elian, the statement said. It said
the Justice Department had been informed that Gonzalez "is
prepared to come to the United States to take custody of his son and
will do so at the earliest possible moment."
Craig's representation applies only to Juan Miguel Gonzalez's dealings
with the Immigration and Naturalization Service and the
Department of Justice, and is not a factor in a federal court hearing
scheduled for today in Miami, legal sources said. Judge K.
Michael Moore will hear arguments in a suit filed by Elian's great-uncle,
Lazaro Gonzalez, against the Justice Department and
the INS to force consideration of political asylum petitions Lazaro
Gonzalez has filed on the child's behalf.
Justice and the INS contend that there are no grounds to contest that
decision and, even if there were, Lazaro Gonzalez has no
standing to do so. Elian has been living with his great-uncle in Miami
since he was found floating in the Atlantic Ocean after a
shipwreck in which his mother and others drowned.
In January, the INS ordered that the boy be returned to his father in
Cuba. But Lazaro Gonzalez, with the support of powerful
factions in Miami's Cuban American community, has refused to do so
on grounds that life in communist Cuba is tantamount to
child abuse.
Those fighting the INS order have also insisted that Juan Miguel Gonzalez
has been pressured by the Cuban government to
insist on Elian's return. Gonzalez's refusal to travel to this country
to fight for custody of his son also has been interpreted by his
Miami relatives as evidence that Cuba will not allow his departure
for fear he would decide to remain in this country.
Gonzalez, with backing from the State Department, has said it is the
INS's responsibility to enforce its order of return and has
said he is loathe to come here and risk involvement in an extended
legal battle.
Although yesterday's Williams and Connolly statement gave no indication
of a change in Gonzalez's position, Justice
Department sources said that it marked the clearest statement to date
of his willingness to travel here once Elian is in INS hands
and was "a positive development" that "will make it easier for us to
negotiate with the father."
Craig originally was approached several weeks ago to represent Gonzalez
by the New York-based National Council of
Churches. Sources said the law firm did not want to be involved until
it was assured it would have direct access to Gonzalez
without Cuban government interference. It was unclear who would be
responsible for Williams and Connolly's fees. Gonzalez is
a gatekeeper at a mall and amusement center in Cuba's Veradero tourist
resort.