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Home › American Imprisoned in Cuba Sues Ex-Employer, U.S. for $60 Million

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American Imprisoned in Cuba Sues Ex-Employer, U.S. for $60 Million

Lawsuit also filed against New Jersey-based insurer

By Jessica Gresko All Articles 

The Associated Press

November 21, 2012

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An American imprisoned in Cuba for nearly three years is suing his former Maryland employer and the United States government for $60 million, saying they didn't adequately train him or disclose risks he was undertaking by doing development work on the Communist island.

Alan Gross and his wife Judy sued Friday in federal court in Washington. The lawsuit alleges that the economic development company Gross was working for in Cuba and the U.S. government, with which the company had a contract, failed to provide Gross "with the education and training that was necessary to minimize the risk of harm to him."

Gross, 63, was arrested in December 2009 while on his fifth trip to Cuba as part of a project to increase the availability of Internet access in the country, particularly to the island's small Jewish community. Gross was working on the effort as a subcontractor for Development Alternatives Inc., an economic development company based in Bethesda, Md.

The company, known as DAI, was a contractor for the U.S. Agency for International Development, the U.S. government agency that provides economic and humanitarian assistance worldwide. USAID has been criticized by Cuba for seeking to promote democratic change on the island, and Cuba says its programs are a veiled attempt by Washington to undermine the government.

The lawsuit alleges that Gross expressed concern about his project several times but was pressured by DAI to "finish the project or to find someone else who would." When the U.S. government learned of Gross' concerns, officials also did nothing, the lawsuit says.

DAI said in a statement Friday that the company had "numerous disagreements" with the lawsuit's content. The statement did not specify those disagreements but said the company is confident it will "have a chance to tell DAI's side of this story in due course." State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said Friday she was not aware of the lawsuit and had no immediate comment.

According to the lawsuit, Gross wrote in a report to DAI after a third trip to the island in 2009, "This is very risky business in no uncertain terms."

He repeated the same sentiment in a report after his fourth trip, writing essentially the same sentence in bold. The lawsuit alleges Gross should have been provided with better information and training, including counterintelligence training, and that DAI and the government left him in the dark about the specific risks of performing the work he was doing in Cuba.

Gross' wife Judy, who now lives in Washington, has previously said that her husband feels he was misled by DAI. Judy Gross said in a 2011 interview with The Associated Press that her husband wanted reassurance that what he was doing was legal, but the company refused to contact Cuban officials and refused to let him contact anyone either.

The Cuban government tightly controls access to the Internet in the country. Most access is dial-up and goes to an island intranet, rather than the full worldwide web. According to government statistics, only 2.9 percent of islanders had direct Internet access last year. The true figure is probably between 5 percent and 10 percent considering under-the-table sales of dial-up minutes.

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Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • Associated Press
  • Deutsches Archäologisches Institut
  • USAID
  • State Department
  • U.S. Agency for International Development

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