For Jacksonville physician Dr. Javier Garcia-Bengochea, this was never just about docks in Havana.

It was about justice.
And this week, after a battle spanning nearly six decades, Dr. Garcia-Bengochea and his family received a major victory from the highest court in the land.
In a powerful opinion written by Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, the Court ruled in favor of Havana Docks Corporation in its fight against major cruise companies including Carnival Corporation and Royal Caribbean Group over the use of confiscated Cuban property.
The ruling centered on docks in Havana that were seized by the Cuban government after Fidel Castro’s communist revolution in 1960. Despite the confiscation, cruise lines later used those same docks to transport hundreds of thousands of passengers into Cuba.
Justice Thomas, writing for the majority, made it clear that the physical docks themselves remained “confiscated property,” and companies using them could potentially be held liable under U.S. law.
For Dr. Garcia-Bengochea, the decision represents far more than a legal technicality.
His family’s story traces back to Cuba before Castro’s takeover, when Havana Docks held rights connected to the Port of Havana. Like so many Cuban families, they watched businesses, property, and dreams disappear under the communist regime. But unlike many who gave up hope, Dr. Garcia-Bengochea and his family continued the fight through decades of political changes, court battles, and uncertainty.
Friends in Jacksonville know Dr. Garcia-Bengochea not as a headline, but as a respected physician, family man, and proud Cuban-American who quietly carried this cause for years.
Now, the United States Supreme Court has validated what the family argued all along: confiscated property cannot simply be erased by time.
The case now heads back to lower court for further proceedings and could expose the cruise lines to significant financial damages.
But for many watching this unfold — especially within the Cuban-American community — the bigger victory is symbolic.
Nearly 60 years after Castro’s regime tried to erase families, businesses, and dreams, a Jacksonville doctor stood before the highest court in America — and won.
To read the full ruling, go here: https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/25pdf/24-983_c07d.pdf







