Miami Man Sues American Airlines for Using “His” Havana, Cuba Airport

By Nora Gamez Torres, El Nuevo Herald /dpa

Havana Photo by Jeff Lucas

HAVANA TIMES – In an anticipated legal case, American Airlines on Wednesday became the first air carrier to be sued for conducting business on properties confiscated by the government in Cuba, despite having obtained authorization from the Obama administration to fly to the island.

The federal lawsuit, which also includes Chile’sLATAM Airlines, was filed in Miami on Wednesday by Jose Ramon Lopez Regueiro. He is the son of Jose Lopez Vilaboy, a businessman close to Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista who was the owner in 1959 of what is now Havana’s Jose Marti International Airport before it was confiscated by the revolutionary government led by Fidel Castro.

According to the lawsuit, filed by the Rivero Mestre law firm, Lopez Vilaboy bought the land of the Rancho Boyeros airport from its previous owner, Pan American Airways, in 1952 for 1.5 million dollars in cash. The Cuban businessman then modernized the runway and built the airport terminal that he renamed Jose Marti.

“For his efforts, Vilaboy, like so many other Cubans, was left with nothing when Fidel Castro took power and established a communist government, which stole his property and forced him and his family to flee Cuba,” the lawsuit claims.

Lopez Regueiro sued the two airlines for the use of the Havana airport facilities without his authorization, which constitutes “unlawful trafficking in his confiscated property in Cuba,” the lawsuit says, in violation of Title III of the Helms-Burton law.

In a statement to the Miami Herald, American Airlines said several US government agencies have authorized its trips to Cuba.

“Title III specifically exempts lawful travel, which is what American provides. We’ll review this lawsuit in detail and vigorously defend our service to Cuba,” the statement said.

“It’s a matter of justice,” Lopez Regueiro told the Herald. “They took everything from my father and didn’t compensate anyone.”

The same day Batista fled the island at dawn on January 1, 1959, Lopez Vilaboy requested asylum at the Guatemalan Embassy. Lopez Regueiro, then 6 years old, remained in Cuba until the late 1980s, when he emigrated to Spain.

“I didn’t see him again. He died in March 1989 in Miami,” his son said.

A Florida court declared Lopez Regueiro his father’s legitimate and only heir. In addition to the airport, Lopez Vilaboy was a shareholder of the airline company Cubana de Aviacion, and owned a newspaper and a hotel, among other properties. All were confiscated by the Castro government, which accused him of having exploited his relationship with Batista to obtain loans from the government and sometimes act as the “front man” of the Cuban leader.

Lopez Vilaboy denied the accusations in a memoir.

“For the Cuban government, either you are with the government, or you are bad. For the [Castro] government nobody owned property legitimately,” Lopez Regueiro said.

The case is the latest in more than a dozen lawsuits so far against Carnival, Royal Caribbean, Expedia, Booking.com, Melia, Credit Suisse and other companies accused of having taken advantage of confiscated properties without having compensated their original owners.

The Helms-Burton law establishes exceptions for “transactions and uses of property incident to lawful travel to Cuba.” Two Florida judges ruled recently that this determination must be made at a later date and allowed lawsuits related to the use of Cuban ports to continue their course.

Unlike cruise ships, American Airlines transports commercial cargo to Cuba, said lawyer Andres Rivero, who represents Lopez Regueiro and other plaintiffs in similar cases.

Rivero said he initially chose an American and a Latin American airline to test the main legal issues in the case. If it succeeds, other companies could be added to the lawsuit, or the firm could file separate lawsuits, he said.

About 50 airlines, including five US carriers, fly to Havana’s Jose Marti International Airport.

Although the properties were confiscated in Cuba more than 60 years ago, the legal battles began in May, when President Donald Trump broke with tradition and decided to enforce the right to seek compensation in federal courts provided for in Title III. Since President Bill Clinton signed the law in 1996, all presidents had suspended that right every six months to avoid conflicts with foreign governments with commercial interests in Cuba.

Title III allows Cubans who later became US citizens to file lawsuits, which expands the number of potential cases, since most of the properties confiscated by Castro had Cuban owners.

In a sign of concern, the Cuban official press had dedicated several articles to a possible claim for the use of the Havana airport, arguing that Lopez Vilaboy’s properties were legally confiscated because he was involved in illegal acts while Batista was in power.

Rivero said he is not worried that this argument will reach the courts.

“Bring it,” he said. “We have not sued the Cuban government in this case, but we will do it in others.”

8 thoughts on “Miami Man Sues American Airlines for Using “His” Havana, Cuba Airport

  • Let’s hope not. “Ni un centimo” !

  • I’m not a supporter of castrismo, but neither do I think that these batistiano crooks and murderers are entitled to getting back “ni un centimo” of their property either!

  • Although I’m not a fan of castrismo, i find it equally repulsive that this tiny minority of noisy diehard batistiano crooks in South FL continue to be able to formulate US policy towards Cuba after 60 years.

  • So who did the Spanish steal Texas from N. Wrigley?

  • Oh so now we are returning everything that belonged to someone else due to a revolution or a war. Wow that is going to be some task.
    Get over yourself. Never going to happen

  • He will hopefully get nada because deserves nada. He is nothing but a greedy Batistiano.

  • The Castro’s dynasty stole this property from this family without compensation now American Airlines is profiting in the back of Cuban people slaves of the dictatorship. Great move Mr Lopez. Hope the Cuban people be free very soon.

  • What about Lopez’ Spanish ancestors who took the island without compensation from the original people who had lived there for hundreds of years. They not only took the land but also slaughtered the native population. Similar to what we now call genocide.
    What about the land that was taken without compensation from the First Nations people in what is now called Untied States?
    What about the land that was stolen from the Spanish without compensation in what is now called Texas?
    Lopez, take a look at your immigrant ancestry. How far back do you want to go for compensation?

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