Madeleiny Fuentes León, who never published the video, was arrested by the Technical Investigations Department.

Madeleiny Fuentes León, 30, a resident of Santa Isabel de las Lajas, Cienfuegos, was arrested last Friday by agents of the Technical Investigations Department (DTI), under orders from Cuba’s Ministry of the Interior, after she recorded a video of a police search of her home and sent it to her sister, Madeley Fuentes León, in the United States. According to a complaint filed Tuesday by the legal advice center Cubalex, although the video was never released, authorities threatened the woman with three to five years in prison for recording the police.
According to the NGO, agents arrived at the residence with a search warrant, entered the home, and confiscated two cell phones and cash. The reason for the operation, according to the group Freedom For Cuba, based in West Palm Beach, Florida, and to which Madeleiny’s sister belongs, was “retaliation because Madeley, from the United States, publicly defends freedom in Cuba.”
In another post on their Facebook page, the group even claims that the agents arrived at Madeleiny Fuentes’ house “with photographs taken from the US, where Madeley appears participating in activities of the movement for the freedom of Cuba.”
Fuentes León’s family members “continue to lack access to clear information about her situation”
Cubalex also reported that the young woman is being held at the detention center known as El Técnico in Cienfuegos, after spending more than 72 hours in custody, awaiting formal charges. In this regard, the Cuban Institute for Freedom of Expression and the Press (ICLEP) stated that Fuentes León’s family “continues to lack access to clear information about her situation, following the authorities’ refusal to provide details for at least 72 hours.”
Meanwhile, Justicia 11J reported that they contacted Madeley in the United States, who stated that she “fears the possible arrest of her mother, Mabel León Fonseca, after she attended a summons from authorities of the continue reading
Cubalex stressed that her detention was arbitrary and that it “reveals a pattern of repression by association against her, and of transnational repression against her sister Madeley, for her participation in protests in West Palm Beach.”
Likewise, the legal advice center stressed that recording the police “is not a crime, it is a citizen’s right, as was confirmed with the definitive dismissal of the case against Anna Sofía Benítez and her mother, Caridad Silvente.”
Recording the police “is not a crime, it is a citizen’s right, as was confirmed with the definitive dismissal of the case against Anna Sofía Benítez”
In an analysis published last March, the NGO points out that Cuba’s Constitution (2019) “is clear”: state bodies, their directors, and employees are obligated to submit to the control of the people. Furthermore, Article 101 establishes that state bodies must act with due transparency. A police officer delivering a summons is performing a public and official act, not a private one, and is therefore subject to scrutiny and verification of that act.
Furthermore, it cites the Criminal Procedure Law (2021), in its Article 326, which explicitly recognizes that audio and video recordings made by private individuals can be admitted as evidence, provided they are not obtained through deception or violence. “Filming an official on the street while performing their duties is not a crime; it is, in fact, a way to obtain lawful evidence regarding the legality of an action. Therefore, this material could be used in any eventual legal proceedings to determine whether the police officer’s conduct complies with the law,” it adds.
Cubalex emphasizes that recording the police while they are performing their duties is not an act of “disobedience” or “resistance,” but a guarantee that human rights and the dignity of individuals are respected.
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