If New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has his way, there will be no flights from his home state to Cuba until the communist country extradites a woman convicted of killing a state trooper in 1977.
Christie, who is trying to rebuild momentum for his attenuated presidential campaign, wrote a letter to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey asking the agency to ban flights from Newark Liberty International Airport to Havana until the 67-year-old murderer, JoAnne Chesimard, is returned.
“I will not tolerate rewarding the Cuban government for continuing to harbor a fugitive,” Christie wrote Tuesday to Port Authority chief John Degnan. A spokesman at the governor’s office declined to give further comment, saying the letter — first reported by the Associated Press — “speaks for itself.”
RELATED: As U.S.-Cuba tension thaws, the fate of a fugitive is in question
Chesimard, also known as Assata Shakur, found her way to Cuba in 1979 after being convicted in the murder of police officer Werner Foerster and consequently escaping from a New Jersey prison. Chesimard, a former member of the Black Panthers and the Black Liberation Army, was eventually granted asylum under President Fidel Castro in 1984.









