Gold9472
05-10-2007, 07:45 AM
U.S. charges against anti-Castro exile dismissed
http://in.today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2007-05-09T080837Z_01_NOOTR_RTRJONC_0_India-297317-1.xml&archived=False
By Jeff Franks
5/9/2007
HOUSTON (Reuters) - A U.S. judge threw out all charges against anti-Castro Cuban exile and former CIA operative Luis Posada Carriles on Tuesday, allowing him to go free days before he was set to be tried for immigration fraud.
The surprise decision by U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone in El Paso, Texas, left uncertain the fate of Posada, who has a long history of violent opposition to Cuban leader Fidel Castro, and is viewed by many Castro opponents as a hero.
He is wanted in Cuba and Venezuela, where is accused of masterminding the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner that killed 73 people.
Cardone dismissed the immigration charges on grounds that the U.S. government case was based on statements it got from Posada Carriles, 79, under false pretenses.
He thought he was in an immigration interview that was actually a criminal interrogation, his lawyers said, and the judge agreed.
"The government's tactics in this case are so grossly shocking and so outrageous as to violate the universal sense of justice," Cardone wrote.
"This court will not set aside such rights nor overlook government misconduct because defendant is a political hot potato," she said in the 38-page ruling.
Her decision provoked an angry response from Cuba, which says the Bush administration has coddled Posada Carriles because of his CIA past and his support in the U.S. Cuban exile community.
"If the well-known terrorist Posada Carriles is free without charges it is the full responsibility of the White House," Dagoberto Rodriguez, Cuba's top diplomat in Washington, said in a statement.
The Bush administration, he said, "has done all it can to protect the bin Laden of this hemisphere, for fear that he can talk about the connection between the U.S. government and his terrorist activities."
DOUBLE STANDARD
Cuban leader Fidel Castro and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez have criticized Washington for having a double standard in its war on terror, saying Posada Carriles should be charged with terrorism and murder, not immigration crimes.
Venezuela has sought his extradition for trial in the airline bombing, which occurred while Posada Carriles, a naturalized Venezuelan, lived there.
"Trying him for minor immigration infractions was a travesty of justice and was designed to fool people into believing the government was serious about prosecuting this man," said Jose Pertierra, a Washington-based lawyer representing the Venezuelan government in the extradition case.
Posada Carriles had been in U.S. custody since May 2005 after he entered the country illegally and sought asylum.
In January, he was indicted on seven immigration fraud charges accusing of lying to immigration authorities.
In theory, he faced up to 40 years in prison if convicted, but Cardone said in her ruling that most cases such as his result in a sentence of a few months.
Jury selection for his trial had been set for Friday, with opening arguments and testimony to begin on Monday.
Department of Justice spokesman Dean Boyd said the government was "reviewing the decision" by Cardone, but he did not know yet if it would appeal.
Immigrations officials took no action on Tuesday to detain Posada Carriles, but have said before they could put him in detention until his immigration status is settled.
According to news reports, a federal grand jury in Newark, New Jersey has been investigating Posada Carriles' past activities for possible indictment. The FBI took the unusual step of sending agents to Cuba to gather evidence, the Miami Herald said.
Along with the plane bombing, he is accused in Cuba of plotting a series of 1997 hotel bombings in Havana that killed an Italian tourist.
He was jailed in Panama for plotting to kill Castro during an Ibero-American summit in 2000, but was pardoned by outgoing President Mireya Moscoso in 2004.
For now, his lawyers said he would return to Miami, where he has lived with his wife since he was released from jail April 19 on bail totaling $350,000.
"He is elated," said attorney Arturo Hernandez in Miami. "He is very gratified that the system has worked."
Pressure grows to prosecute Cuban exile
Dismissal of charge against admitted terrorist stirs outrage.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-posada10may10,1,2988477.story?coll=la-headlines-world&ctrack=1&cset=true
By Carol J. Williams, Times Staff Writer
May 10, 2007
MIAMI — Three months before the 1976 midair explosion of a Cuban plane off the coast of Barbados, CIA covert operative Luis Posada Carriles cabled his U.S. minders from Venezuela to report that the plot was in motion and asked for Washington's "assistance."
Recently declassified CIA communications confirm that a U.S. agent got back to Posada within a few days. Other internal communications obtained by the National Security Archive research project put Posada in regular contact with Washington handlers from the time of his arrival here just before the 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion through the late 1990s, when he allegedly masterminded a series of Havana hotel bombings in an effort to crush Cuba's budding tourism business.
The 79-year-old anticommunist, who turned up two years ago in Miami, has never been charged by U.S. justice officials with participating in a violent act, not even the hotel bombings purportedly financed by fellow Cuban exiles in New Jersey and about which Posada has boasted.
On Tuesday, the sole prosecution brought by Washington against the Cuban-born Posada, an immigration fraud charge, was quashed by a federal judge in Texas, leaving a man branded by the U.S. Justice Department as "a dangerous criminal and an admitted mastermind of terrorist plots" free to roam a country he entered illegally and from which another court has ordered him deported.
Angry denunciations from Cuba and Venezuela of the "impunity" accorded Posada reached a high point Wednesday after word spread that U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone in El Paso had quashed the immigration case, denouncing the U.S. government for manipulating evidence and mistranslating testimony from its longtime collaborator.
"In addition to engaging in fraud, deceit and trickery, this Court finds the Government's tactics in this case are so grossly shocking and so outrageous as to violate the universal sense of justice. As a result, this Court is left with no choice but to dismiss the indictment," Cardone wrote in her scathing 38-page opinion.
As international condemnation mounts against the United States' failure to prosecute an admitted terrorist, congressional leaders were demanding to know Wednesday from U.S. Atty. Gen. Alberto R. Gonzales why he hasn't declared Posada a security threat and jailed him under the Patriot Act.
"Mr. Posada's release from prison calls into question our commitment to combating terrorism and raises concerns about a double standard in our treatment of terrorists," Rep. William D. Delahunt (D-Mass.) wrote the attorney general.
In an interview Wednesday, Delahunt said he planned to launch an investigation into Posada's longtime relationship with the U.S. government and the Bush administration's failure to brand Posada a terrorist. A former prosecutor, Delahunt called Judge Cardone's action almost unprecedented in its excoriation of the government's handling of the case.
"It is incumbent on us to conduct a thorough and exhaustive investigation in a professional manner, in a way that reassures the world that we're not hypocrites and that nefarious, unsavory machinations do not happen behind closed doors," Delahunt said of the Posada case, which he described as a baffling evasion of justice.
He also wants a probe into how evidence against Posada in the hotel bombings now sought by a New Jersey grand jury got destroyed at the FBI's Miami office in 2003, after the government's only active case against Posada was dropped. Posada at the time was serving a sentence in Panama for plotting to assassinate Cuban leader Fidel Castro in 2000, a term that would be cut short less than a year later as a favor to the Bush administration fighting for Cuban exile votes in its 2004 reelection battle.
Unease over CIA ties cited
National Security Archive project director Peter Kornbluh attributes the U.S. government's failure to win a conviction against Posada to Washington's apparent complicity in some of Posada's alleged criminal acts. Prosecutors' efforts to banish any mention of his CIA service from the immigration case were "a reflection of real concern about details of past operations that might get thrown into the trial," said Kornbluh, who oversees the George Washington University-based project aimed at disclosing past CIA operations.
Internal CIA cables and reports Kornbluh has unearthed suggest a pattern of contacts between Posada and U.S. government officials dating back to his arrival in Miami less than two years after Castro's 1959 revolutionary triumph.
FBI agents struggling to put a case together for the New Jersey grand jury have reportedly visited Havana in recent weeks in an unusual act of collaboration with Castro's security forces, who have preserved forensics in the case. News reports of the Havana trip spurred angry outbursts from South Florida's three Cuban American congressional representatives. The three Republicans blasted the Bush administration for "asking a state sponsor of terrorism for 'evidence' regarding terrorism."
Those advocating prosecution of Posada point to admissions he made about supervising the hotel bombings, in a June 1998 interview with author and freelance journalist Ann Louise Bardach in Aruba. One Italian tourist died in a 1997 bombing that Posada took responsibility for in the interview.
Bardach's notes and tapes from that three-day visit with the exile have been subpoenaed by the New Jersey grand jury investigating reported links and money transfers between Cuban exiles in Union City, N.J., and Posada when he operated under a CIA-era code name from a front company in Guatemala. Bardach has been fighting the subpoena, claiming journalistic privilege, and the government has so far refrained from pressing the issue.
The grand jury has approached Bardach for evidence against Posada because the FBI documentation of money transfers and other incriminating materials were destroyed in the 2003 Miami bureau incident that Delahunt wants investigated.
FBI spokeswoman Judy Orihuela said the supporting materials on any closed case are routinely cleared out of the bureau's evidence locker to make room for active cases.
With the U.S. government unable or unwilling to raise a case against Posada, pressure is mounting within congressional and human rights circles for the Justice Department to satisfy Venezuela's extradition request to try Posada for the Oct. 6,1976, Cubana Airlines bombing that took 73 lives.
"After learning that Mr. Luis Posada Carriles, a known terrorist, was released from U.S. custody and allowed to reside in the U.S. as a free man, I have become very concerned about our ability to protect our nation," U.S. Rep. Jose E. Serrano (D-N.Y.) wrote to Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff on Wednesday.
Extradition sought
The Caracas government asked for the extradition of Posada soon after he arrived in Florida in March 2005 on a shrimp boat owned by wealthy Cuban American developer Santiago Alvarez, now serving time for weapons violations related to another failed plot against Castro. Posada roamed about Miami for two months before federal agents arrested him in May 2005 for illegally entering the country. An immigration court ordered him deported four months later, but none of the countries contacted by Washington would take him.
Calls to the Cuban Interests Section and the Venezuela Information Office in Washington were not returned, but Cuban and Venezuelan media have denounced the freeing of Posada as evidence that Washington condones terrorism against innocent citizens of states it considers hostile.
With the immigration case dropped, Posada will be relieved of its accompanying house arrest and gag orders that have kept the ailing operative out of the public eye and confined to a small apartment in southwest Miami owned by his long-estranged wife. Nieves Posada and the couple's two adult children had put up $350,000 in bonds pending trial.
Posada and his attorney were reportedly en route back to Miami from El Paso, where they had been preparing for the trial that was to have started Friday.
Amid scandals that have plagued the U.S. Justice Department, the Posada case has drawn little national attention beyond the exile community in Miami. But pressure is mounting, both domestically and abroad, to expose Posada for a lifetime of alleged transgressions, even if some were committed on behalf of or with the full knowledge of U.S. officials.
Nearly a decade after the plane bombing, after Posada had escaped a Venezuelan jail pending retrial, a fellow CIA operative ferried him from his Caribbean hide-out to El Salvador. There he earned as much as $10,000 a month from the U.S. government for organizing safe houses and flying weapons to anticommunist guerrillas in Nicaragua in what came to be known as the Iran-Contra affair.
Posada's CIA weapons and explosives training was put to use repeatedly in the exile's fight against Washington's enemies, including at least half a dozen alleged plots to assassinate Castro.
http://in.today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2007-05-09T080837Z_01_NOOTR_RTRJONC_0_India-297317-1.xml&archived=False
By Jeff Franks
5/9/2007
HOUSTON (Reuters) - A U.S. judge threw out all charges against anti-Castro Cuban exile and former CIA operative Luis Posada Carriles on Tuesday, allowing him to go free days before he was set to be tried for immigration fraud.
The surprise decision by U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone in El Paso, Texas, left uncertain the fate of Posada, who has a long history of violent opposition to Cuban leader Fidel Castro, and is viewed by many Castro opponents as a hero.
He is wanted in Cuba and Venezuela, where is accused of masterminding the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner that killed 73 people.
Cardone dismissed the immigration charges on grounds that the U.S. government case was based on statements it got from Posada Carriles, 79, under false pretenses.
He thought he was in an immigration interview that was actually a criminal interrogation, his lawyers said, and the judge agreed.
"The government's tactics in this case are so grossly shocking and so outrageous as to violate the universal sense of justice," Cardone wrote.
"This court will not set aside such rights nor overlook government misconduct because defendant is a political hot potato," she said in the 38-page ruling.
Her decision provoked an angry response from Cuba, which says the Bush administration has coddled Posada Carriles because of his CIA past and his support in the U.S. Cuban exile community.
"If the well-known terrorist Posada Carriles is free without charges it is the full responsibility of the White House," Dagoberto Rodriguez, Cuba's top diplomat in Washington, said in a statement.
The Bush administration, he said, "has done all it can to protect the bin Laden of this hemisphere, for fear that he can talk about the connection between the U.S. government and his terrorist activities."
DOUBLE STANDARD
Cuban leader Fidel Castro and Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez have criticized Washington for having a double standard in its war on terror, saying Posada Carriles should be charged with terrorism and murder, not immigration crimes.
Venezuela has sought his extradition for trial in the airline bombing, which occurred while Posada Carriles, a naturalized Venezuelan, lived there.
"Trying him for minor immigration infractions was a travesty of justice and was designed to fool people into believing the government was serious about prosecuting this man," said Jose Pertierra, a Washington-based lawyer representing the Venezuelan government in the extradition case.
Posada Carriles had been in U.S. custody since May 2005 after he entered the country illegally and sought asylum.
In January, he was indicted on seven immigration fraud charges accusing of lying to immigration authorities.
In theory, he faced up to 40 years in prison if convicted, but Cardone said in her ruling that most cases such as his result in a sentence of a few months.
Jury selection for his trial had been set for Friday, with opening arguments and testimony to begin on Monday.
Department of Justice spokesman Dean Boyd said the government was "reviewing the decision" by Cardone, but he did not know yet if it would appeal.
Immigrations officials took no action on Tuesday to detain Posada Carriles, but have said before they could put him in detention until his immigration status is settled.
According to news reports, a federal grand jury in Newark, New Jersey has been investigating Posada Carriles' past activities for possible indictment. The FBI took the unusual step of sending agents to Cuba to gather evidence, the Miami Herald said.
Along with the plane bombing, he is accused in Cuba of plotting a series of 1997 hotel bombings in Havana that killed an Italian tourist.
He was jailed in Panama for plotting to kill Castro during an Ibero-American summit in 2000, but was pardoned by outgoing President Mireya Moscoso in 2004.
For now, his lawyers said he would return to Miami, where he has lived with his wife since he was released from jail April 19 on bail totaling $350,000.
"He is elated," said attorney Arturo Hernandez in Miami. "He is very gratified that the system has worked."
Pressure grows to prosecute Cuban exile
Dismissal of charge against admitted terrorist stirs outrage.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-posada10may10,1,2988477.story?coll=la-headlines-world&ctrack=1&cset=true
By Carol J. Williams, Times Staff Writer
May 10, 2007
MIAMI — Three months before the 1976 midair explosion of a Cuban plane off the coast of Barbados, CIA covert operative Luis Posada Carriles cabled his U.S. minders from Venezuela to report that the plot was in motion and asked for Washington's "assistance."
Recently declassified CIA communications confirm that a U.S. agent got back to Posada within a few days. Other internal communications obtained by the National Security Archive research project put Posada in regular contact with Washington handlers from the time of his arrival here just before the 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion through the late 1990s, when he allegedly masterminded a series of Havana hotel bombings in an effort to crush Cuba's budding tourism business.
The 79-year-old anticommunist, who turned up two years ago in Miami, has never been charged by U.S. justice officials with participating in a violent act, not even the hotel bombings purportedly financed by fellow Cuban exiles in New Jersey and about which Posada has boasted.
On Tuesday, the sole prosecution brought by Washington against the Cuban-born Posada, an immigration fraud charge, was quashed by a federal judge in Texas, leaving a man branded by the U.S. Justice Department as "a dangerous criminal and an admitted mastermind of terrorist plots" free to roam a country he entered illegally and from which another court has ordered him deported.
Angry denunciations from Cuba and Venezuela of the "impunity" accorded Posada reached a high point Wednesday after word spread that U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone in El Paso had quashed the immigration case, denouncing the U.S. government for manipulating evidence and mistranslating testimony from its longtime collaborator.
"In addition to engaging in fraud, deceit and trickery, this Court finds the Government's tactics in this case are so grossly shocking and so outrageous as to violate the universal sense of justice. As a result, this Court is left with no choice but to dismiss the indictment," Cardone wrote in her scathing 38-page opinion.
As international condemnation mounts against the United States' failure to prosecute an admitted terrorist, congressional leaders were demanding to know Wednesday from U.S. Atty. Gen. Alberto R. Gonzales why he hasn't declared Posada a security threat and jailed him under the Patriot Act.
"Mr. Posada's release from prison calls into question our commitment to combating terrorism and raises concerns about a double standard in our treatment of terrorists," Rep. William D. Delahunt (D-Mass.) wrote the attorney general.
In an interview Wednesday, Delahunt said he planned to launch an investigation into Posada's longtime relationship with the U.S. government and the Bush administration's failure to brand Posada a terrorist. A former prosecutor, Delahunt called Judge Cardone's action almost unprecedented in its excoriation of the government's handling of the case.
"It is incumbent on us to conduct a thorough and exhaustive investigation in a professional manner, in a way that reassures the world that we're not hypocrites and that nefarious, unsavory machinations do not happen behind closed doors," Delahunt said of the Posada case, which he described as a baffling evasion of justice.
He also wants a probe into how evidence against Posada in the hotel bombings now sought by a New Jersey grand jury got destroyed at the FBI's Miami office in 2003, after the government's only active case against Posada was dropped. Posada at the time was serving a sentence in Panama for plotting to assassinate Cuban leader Fidel Castro in 2000, a term that would be cut short less than a year later as a favor to the Bush administration fighting for Cuban exile votes in its 2004 reelection battle.
Unease over CIA ties cited
National Security Archive project director Peter Kornbluh attributes the U.S. government's failure to win a conviction against Posada to Washington's apparent complicity in some of Posada's alleged criminal acts. Prosecutors' efforts to banish any mention of his CIA service from the immigration case were "a reflection of real concern about details of past operations that might get thrown into the trial," said Kornbluh, who oversees the George Washington University-based project aimed at disclosing past CIA operations.
Internal CIA cables and reports Kornbluh has unearthed suggest a pattern of contacts between Posada and U.S. government officials dating back to his arrival in Miami less than two years after Castro's 1959 revolutionary triumph.
FBI agents struggling to put a case together for the New Jersey grand jury have reportedly visited Havana in recent weeks in an unusual act of collaboration with Castro's security forces, who have preserved forensics in the case. News reports of the Havana trip spurred angry outbursts from South Florida's three Cuban American congressional representatives. The three Republicans blasted the Bush administration for "asking a state sponsor of terrorism for 'evidence' regarding terrorism."
Those advocating prosecution of Posada point to admissions he made about supervising the hotel bombings, in a June 1998 interview with author and freelance journalist Ann Louise Bardach in Aruba. One Italian tourist died in a 1997 bombing that Posada took responsibility for in the interview.
Bardach's notes and tapes from that three-day visit with the exile have been subpoenaed by the New Jersey grand jury investigating reported links and money transfers between Cuban exiles in Union City, N.J., and Posada when he operated under a CIA-era code name from a front company in Guatemala. Bardach has been fighting the subpoena, claiming journalistic privilege, and the government has so far refrained from pressing the issue.
The grand jury has approached Bardach for evidence against Posada because the FBI documentation of money transfers and other incriminating materials were destroyed in the 2003 Miami bureau incident that Delahunt wants investigated.
FBI spokeswoman Judy Orihuela said the supporting materials on any closed case are routinely cleared out of the bureau's evidence locker to make room for active cases.
With the U.S. government unable or unwilling to raise a case against Posada, pressure is mounting within congressional and human rights circles for the Justice Department to satisfy Venezuela's extradition request to try Posada for the Oct. 6,1976, Cubana Airlines bombing that took 73 lives.
"After learning that Mr. Luis Posada Carriles, a known terrorist, was released from U.S. custody and allowed to reside in the U.S. as a free man, I have become very concerned about our ability to protect our nation," U.S. Rep. Jose E. Serrano (D-N.Y.) wrote to Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff on Wednesday.
Extradition sought
The Caracas government asked for the extradition of Posada soon after he arrived in Florida in March 2005 on a shrimp boat owned by wealthy Cuban American developer Santiago Alvarez, now serving time for weapons violations related to another failed plot against Castro. Posada roamed about Miami for two months before federal agents arrested him in May 2005 for illegally entering the country. An immigration court ordered him deported four months later, but none of the countries contacted by Washington would take him.
Calls to the Cuban Interests Section and the Venezuela Information Office in Washington were not returned, but Cuban and Venezuelan media have denounced the freeing of Posada as evidence that Washington condones terrorism against innocent citizens of states it considers hostile.
With the immigration case dropped, Posada will be relieved of its accompanying house arrest and gag orders that have kept the ailing operative out of the public eye and confined to a small apartment in southwest Miami owned by his long-estranged wife. Nieves Posada and the couple's two adult children had put up $350,000 in bonds pending trial.
Posada and his attorney were reportedly en route back to Miami from El Paso, where they had been preparing for the trial that was to have started Friday.
Amid scandals that have plagued the U.S. Justice Department, the Posada case has drawn little national attention beyond the exile community in Miami. But pressure is mounting, both domestically and abroad, to expose Posada for a lifetime of alleged transgressions, even if some were committed on behalf of or with the full knowledge of U.S. officials.
Nearly a decade after the plane bombing, after Posada had escaped a Venezuelan jail pending retrial, a fellow CIA operative ferried him from his Caribbean hide-out to El Salvador. There he earned as much as $10,000 a month from the U.S. government for organizing safe houses and flying weapons to anticommunist guerrillas in Nicaragua in what came to be known as the Iran-Contra affair.
Posada's CIA weapons and explosives training was put to use repeatedly in the exile's fight against Washington's enemies, including at least half a dozen alleged plots to assassinate Castro.