Until today I am sick of prison
Josef Römer was born on 7 October 1955 in the then Gottwaldov (Zlín). He spent his early childhood with his parents in South Bohemia and in 1963 returned to Moravia. In 1969 the family was significantly marked by his mother’s job dismissal, as she spoke openly against the occupation of Czechoslovakia by the Warsaw Pact troops. After elementary school Josef joined the agricultural school in Kladruby nad Labem, where he trained as a horse breeder. In the second half of the 1970s he went to Prague, where he worked in the company Engineering and Industrial Buildings (IPS) and participated in the construction of the Devil’s housing estate. At that time he began attending the American Embassy and attended cultural events there. After completing the recruitment contract with IPS, he moved to work at CSA at Ruzyne Airport. While working at the Ruzyně airport, he saw a plan to leave Czechoslovakia. However, on January 27, 1977, a few days before the planned escape, came an arrest, and several charges were subsequently made: preparation for an attempt to leave the Republic, preparation for threats to air safety and later also a crime of espionage for contacts with US embassy diplomats. On the basis of the testimony of a friend who served in the missile troops of the Czechoslovak People’s Army, another military trial with Josef was iniciated for alleged disclosure of a military secret. He spent two and a half years in custody in Ruzyně. He was sentenced to serve thirteen years in prison and served his sentence in full without three weeks in Valdice. He was released on January 3, 1990. After his return to Zlín he worked for the Civic Forum and SPUSA. Later he started doing business in tourism. He still lives in Zlín today.