Pubdate: Sun, 21 Aug 2011 Source: North Shore News (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 North Shore News Contact: http://www.nsnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/311 Author: James Weldon, North Shore News TEARFUL REUNION FOR NORTH VANCOUVER FAMILY Charges Dropped Against Pavel Kulisek After 3 Years Without Trial A North Vancouver father and husband was reunited with his family at Vancouver International Airport Thursday after spending more than three years in a Mexican jail without trial. Pavel Kulisek, 46, disembarked from an afternoon flight, embraced his wife and two young daughters and headed home to North Vancouver. "I am happy to be back home with my family and grateful for all the generous support we have received," he said in a statement posted online. "I look forward to putting this terrible experience behind me and getting back to a normal life." The reunion came two days after a Mexican judge cleared Kulisek of drug trafficking and gang charges, citing lack of evidence, and ordered him released from prison. Kulisek's ordeal began in March 2008, a few months after the family had moved to Los Barriles on Mexico's Baja Peninsula, when police raided a restaurant where he was dining with another man who turned out to be Gustavo Rivera Martinez, a major figure in the Tijuana drug trade. Kulisek was charged with drug trafficking and membership in a criminal organization, and thrown in jail. From the beginning, Kulisek and his family have insisted he was guilty of nothing more than being in the wrong place at the wrong time. They claimed the North Vancouverite had not realized Martinez's real identity until the raid. Rather, Kulisek said he had met and befriended the man through the bike-racing circuit, and that he had been led to believe his name was Carlos Herrera. For the following three years, Kulisek was confined to a 2.5metre-by-four-metre cell for 22 hours a day, with his only breaks being for meals and a three-hour respite each week to play dominoes and another hour to paint. While he languished in prison, his supporters waged a protracted legal battle to get him free. They staged rallies and fundraisers and lobbied government on his behalf. The trafficking charge against Kulisek was finally dropped last year, but the charge of membership in organized crime was harder to deal with, as his case could not be addressed until it was separated from Martinez's and that of another man who was arrested at the same time. In March this year, Kulisek was told his application to be tried on his own had hit a snag, that a judge wouldn't be able to review it for another eight months, and that it wouldn't go to trial for at least another four months after that. Despairing, Kulisek tried to kill himself. The authorities then moved him to a psychiatric facility. Things turned around abruptly this week, however, when a judge reviewed his case and threw out the last of the charges. Kulisek's wife, Jirina Kuliskova, thanked the people who had made the outcome possible. "I would like to extend my deepest gratitude to those who have supported and helped Pavel and our family during our painful journey over the past three years," she said in the statement. "Without all of you, my girls and I would not have survived this terrible ordeal. Asked what they were going to do next, she said they had no concrete plans, but that she hoped to take the family camping. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.