[NYTr] Closing Arguments End, Cuban Child's Custody Case Goes to Judge Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2007 01:30:32 -0500 (CDT) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit CBS4 Miami - Sep 20, 2007 http://cbs4.com/local/local_story_261082122.html Cuba Custody Case Winds Down With Mudslinging Judge Will Issue Her Ruling By Week's End Custody Trial: Judge Reprimands Defense Ileana Varela Reporting (CBS4) MIAMI--The mudslinging continued -- even during closing arguments -- in an international custody dispute involving a Miami girl and her father, who wants to take her with him back to Cuba. As he made his closing arguments, the attorney representing the father, lashed out at the foster parents who have had the 5-year-old girl in their care in Miami. Attorney Ira Kurzban also played up on the shaky testimony that came from the girl's biological mother, Elena Perez, on Wednesday. "Then she came back on the witness stand, and said 'no I lied to you again,'" said Kurzban. "So even though the day before 'I told her I would never lie again,' she lied again." Kurzban accused the girl's adoptive parents, Joe and Maria Cubas of taking the girl months before being granted official custody, statements that [the] judge was not happy to hear from the attorney. The father of the girl in question, Rafael Izquierdo, is a Cuban farmer who did not speak on the phone or write letters to his daughter for nine months after she moved to the U.S., a clear sign of his abandonment of the girl, state child welfare attorneys said in closing arguments Wednesday. Rafael Izquierdo wants to take his daughter back to Cuba again and denies he abandoned the girl. But he made virtually no effort to be a parent when the girl left the island nation with her mother, said attorneys for the Florida Department of Children & Families and the girl's state-appointed legal guardian. Kurzban argued Izquierdo did have contact with the girl's mother during that time, and that it was difficult for him to get permission to leave Cuba and to come to the U.S. to claim his daughter. If Circuit Judge Jeri B. Cohen decides Izquierdo did not abandon his daughter, she must then rule on whether the 5-year-old girl is better off with him or with her Cuban-American foster parents, who live in the Miami area and want to keep her. The case has been compared to the one of Elian Gonzalez, who returned with his father to Cuba after armed federal agents took him from relatives in Miami. But unlike that case, the girl's mother wants her to be with the father and Miami's Cuban-American community has largely stayed quiet. The state has taken an unusually active role in this case, which the judge acknowledges is playing out under the specter of tense U.S.-Cuba relations. The girl has been in foster care since her emotionally troubled mother, Elena Perez, tried to commit suicide almost two years ago. Her testimony was marked by her lying on the stand, but attorneys for the state tried to focus on Izquierdo's behavior toward the girl. "He left her -- like Elena -- out to dry," said John O'Sullivan, the attorney for the girl's legal guardian. The judge called that argument the strongest one from the prosecution side. She wasn't as swayed by their other arguments. When O'Sullivan said the father didn't try hard enough to come to the U.S. and get his daughter after she went into foster care, Cohen dismissed the point, saying the father is under the impression that she would be repatriated. Cohen went on to blame DCF for not making more effort to contact the father in Cuba. "They're usually falling all over themselves calling fathers," she said. "The difference in this case is that the father lived in Cuba." Cohen referred several times to a previous custody case, where a parent's recent presence in the child's life successfully challenged the abandonment claim. "I read that and I said, 'Congratulations, he's here now,"' Cohen said, indicating to Izquierdo, who has visited with his daughter dozens of times since his arrival in the U.S. During the defense's closing argument, attorney Ira Kurzban said his client was courageous coming to the United States from Cuba when the countries have not had diplomatic relations for decades. "For this man to come, I think you don't appreciate what a heroic act this is," Kurzban said. He disputed a claim that Izquierdo did not make efforts to communicate with his daughter. Kurzban referred to testimony by the girl's half brother who said the girl spoke to her father at least once a month via telephone. The day closed with a debate over some of the time the girl spent in foster care. After a few months, it became clear the girl was not going to be repatriated or returned to her mother, but her father did not immediately apply for a humanitarian visa or passport, Cohen said. "I am bothered by that period," Cohen said. "I don't know whether that's neglect under the statute." Kurzban said the girl's father had hired a lawyer, who argued on his behalf for custody of the child. But prosecuting attorneys said the girl was emotionally damaged when her father failed to come to the United States and take her out of foster care. The judge said she would make a decision by Friday or early next week. (B) 2007 CBS Broadcasting Inc. 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