Sting of the Wasp: The Cuban Five Connection

Interview on Posada trial with CBC Radio’s Dispatches

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Shedding light, perhaps, on an assassination plot

Luis Posada Carriles
Luis Posada Carriles

A legal argument Thursday over whether prosecutors should be permitted to tell the jury that Luis Posada allegedly talked with an FBI agent while in prison in Panama in 2000 may have inadvertently opened a new, if small window on what we know about a plot to assassinate Fidel Castro.

Posada and three accomplices were charged in November 2000 in connection with a botched attack on the Cuban leader.

On November 22, 2000, while Posada was still in jail awaiting trial, he met with  local FBI legal attaché Gil Torres.

During that conversation, Posada supposedly told Torres he had, in fact, “planned the attack” on Castro but “abandoned it when he realized there would be too much collateral damage.”

Posada has always—before and since—publicly denied any involvement in the plot, insisting he was in Panama at the time only to meet with a wannabe Cuban military defector.

Five years later, during his 2005 asylum hearing, a Homeland Security lawyer again asked Posada whether he’d told the FBI he had planned the attack.

Posada answered “I don’t recall.”

Because the 2000 Panama interview took place in prison and Posada didn’t have counsel present, Judge Kathleen Cardone had already ruled the transcript couldn’t be used as evidence during Posada’s current immigration fraud case.

But prosecutors argued Thursday that shouldn’t stop them from simply making reference to the fact of the 2000 interview based on what Posada had said—under oath and with his lawyer present—during his asylum hearing five years later. During the ensuing arguments between the lawyers, the snippet about the FBI interview came out.

In the end, Judge Cardone rejected the government request.

What that means is that the jury won’t get to hear anything about the 2000 interview in which Posada confessed to planning the assassination, while—as he so often does—contradicting other statements he’d already made.

But thanks to the lawyerly arguments, we now at least know what Posada supposedly told the FBI about his role.

Not that that necessarily gets us any closer to the truth…
 

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Does the U.S. government want to convict Posada?

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El Paso Federal Court House

If you are inclined to conspiracy theories, you might conclude—based on the evidence of the first few days of testimony in the immigration fraud trial of alleged terrorist Luis Posada Carriles—that the U.S. government is doing its damnedest to lose the case.

While the notion that prosecutors don’t want to win is almost certainly unfair, the reality is that prosecutor Jerome J. Teresinski’s performance with his first witness this week was—to be charitable—stunningly inept.

And his first witness, Gina Garrett-Jackson—the Miami-based Homeland Security lawyer who handled Posada’s 2005 asylum application—didn’t help the cause.

Teresinski, who one reporter described as looking like a young Robert Duvall, began by introducing one version of Posada’s asylum application without explaining there were, in fact, two identical but different-dated applications.

Which gave the defence a chance to muddify the legal waters almost before the first question had been asked.

Once that was cleared up and the exhibit properly introduced, Teresinski asked Garrett-Jackson a series of open-ended questions that allowed her, perhaps encouraged her, to ramble and answer questions he hadn’t asked. Justice Kathleen Cardone admonished both the lawyer and the witness to stick to the standard legal process of specific question-answer, question-answer.

That ate up his first afternoon. Thursday morning he tried another tack, asking Garrett-Jackson to read sections of the transcripts of Posada’s various hearings to herself—while the jury stared at the ceiling—and then proceeded to ask her confirmatory questions about what she’d just read.

After the defence objected, he switched course and asked the witness to read chunks of the transcript directly into the record. But he went back to the beginning and asked her about all the same passages he’d quizzed her on earlier.

When the defence objected again—this time to the witness’s intonations when she read—Teresinski switched gears one final time and played audio-taped excerpts—of the same material the jury had already heard twice in other forms—for the jury members who followed along on headphones.

By the time Teresinski finally managed to finish his direct examination of the witness—a witness whose job was simply to set the stage for the battle to come—there was less than an hour left in the day for the defence to begin its cross-examination.

Since the court won’t be sitting Friday and Monday is the Martin Luther King holiday in the U.S., the trial won’t resume until Tuesday. At this pace, joked judge Kathleen Cardone at one point, proceedings could drag on for two years. While that’s unlikely, the predictions of a four-to-six week trial are beginning to seem optimistic.

Court observers seemed perplexed by the government’s stumbling start.

The reality is that the three front-and-centre lawyers on the government side—Teresinski, lead prosecutor Timothy J. Reardon III and Bridget Behling—are all ostensibly high-powered trial attorneys with the U.S. Department of Justice’s Counterterrorism Section, National Security Division, in Washington, and were parachuted into El Paso specifically to handle this case.

None of which is to suggest the war is lost. Trials have their own ebb and flow, and the government can certainly recover its momentum and equilibrium. But the reality is that they are not off to an auspicious start.

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Posada trial, Day 3: Opening arguments, the Bill Clinton sex defence

Laying the groundwork for what sounded very much like a Bill Clinton “I-did-not-have-sex-with-that-woman” defence, Luis Posada’s lawyer insisted today his client “told the truth… told substantially the truth on the major questions” that U.S. prosecutors insist he lied about.

During opening arguments at Posada’s trial on charges he lied during his 2005 immigration application, Arturo Hernandez attempted to parse the words “soliciting” and “arranging”—which Posada denied he did in relation to a 1997 Havana hotel bombing campaign—as “terms of art." 

He also said that during a 1998 interview with journalist Ann Louise Bardach, when Posada claimed credit for the bombings, he was simply taking “overall responsibility as the world’s most well known anti-Castro activist... the dean of anti-Castro opponents” for what was, in reality "an inside operation."

Hernandez also served notice he plans to attack the credibility of key prosecution witnesses, calling one a “Cuban spy” and dismissing another as a man who had “dated Castro’s daughter.” He described journalist Bardach, who is scheduled to testify, as a “biased individual” and said  it’s a “known fact” that the New York Times for which she wrote the story often has a “pro-Castro” bias.

But the judge prevented Hernandez—for the moment at least—from directly making one of his other key arguments: that Cuba has a 50-year track record of “fabricating evidence,” including at the trial of the Cuban Five and in eight other instances.

Judge Kathleen Cardone ruled he could not use that material in his opening statement. She said the defence could introduce such evidence later in the trial, but only if it can lay a legal foundation for it. “That’s a high burden,” she added.

In contrast to the dapper, avuncular Hernandez’s impassioned hour-long presentation, chief prosecutor Timothy Reardon III, a balding man with a grey fringe who normally walks with a cane but limped, cane-less, during his presentation this morning, spoke slowly and deliberately during his 30-minute opening statement.

“This is a case about lying and choice,” he told the jurors, and proceeded to take them through the chronology of the case from March 18, 2005 when the prosecution says Posada arrived in Miami by boat—Posada told officials he had entered the U.S. near Houston after paying $10,000 to a "coyote" or illegal alien smuggler—to the superseding indictment filed against Posada in April 2009.

Summing up the government's case, Reardon quoted Scottish author Walter Scott: "Oh what a tangled web we weave when first we practise to deceive."

The case continues.

More later...
 

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Posada trial opening day

EL PASO, Texas--Luis Posada Carrile's long-awaited, much delayed trial stuttered--almost literally--out of the gate Monday.

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Anti Posada demonstrators outside court house

Judge Kathleen Cardone spent a long day bulk-questioning 130 potential jurors about everything from whether they'd read or heard anything about the case--42 had--to whether they, or their friends or family, had any connection with law enforcement. A surprising number--or perhaps not so surprising in a city that boasts one of the largest police and border patrol establishments in the United States—detailed their various family and social connections to law enforcement.

At least as many jurors responded to the judge's question about whether they or anyone close to them had gone through the American naturalization process to become citizens, an especially common experience in this border town where 80 per cent of the population describes themselves as of Hispanic heritage.

Only one would-be juror said she didn't really know "anything" about the state of relations between Cuba and the United States, but none claimed they had a strong opinion about Cuban-American relations.

Lawyers will use the potential jurors’ answers to the judge’s questions--along with material they've generated themselves--to help them choose what they hope will be the most sympathetic jury for their case.

The trial itself is expected to begin with opening arguments Tuesday and will probably last for four to six weeks.

Random notes from Day 1:

  • Pro Posada demonstrators outside court house1 300x225
    Pro Posada demonstrators
    The day began with dueling demonstrations by pro- and anti-Posada factions. The two groups kept a respectful distance as they waved posters and chanted for the cameras in front of the courthouse building on East San Antonio Avenue. You can watch a video report on the anti-Posada demonstration at the website of the Nation Committee to Free the Five.
  • Posada, with a retinue of bodyguards wearing weapons, arrived at the courthouse just after 8 a.m. and breezed past the protestors.
  • During the trial, Posada and his entourage are staying at the nearby Camina Real hotel, which is where some of the organizers of the anti-Posada rally also bunked down Sunday night. Although there was apparently a mild confrontation at breakfast--someone yelled insults at Posada--Gloria La Riva, the director of the National Free the Five Committee, which organized the protest, insists the heckler "wasn't one of ours."
  • Because of the size of the jury pool, Judge Cardone moved jury selection out of her usual courtroom into a larger one. Even that wasn’t large enough for all the first batch of 130 potential jurors, however, so additional chairs were brought in. Half a dozen reporters and a handful of interested spectators were shuffled off to an empty court room five floors below to watch the proceedings via closed circuit TV. But officials couldn't get the audio to work properly. The reporters couldn’t see anything more revealing than a static wide shot of the front of the courtroom—which did not include a view of the defence table, for example, where Posada was seated—and the headache-inducing reverberation from a stuttering audio feed  made it virtually impossible to decipher what anyone was saying. Once the jury is selected, proceedings will return to Judge Cardone’s regular court room for the actual trial.
  • Although the Albert Armendariz, Sr., court house in downtown El Paso, where the case is being heard, is just seven months old and boasts large, airy court rooms, it is decidedly media and new-technology unfriendly. Visitors to the building, including reporters, aren't allowed to bring cell phones, cameras, or recording devices into the building, let alone the courtroom. Most judges, Cardone among them, won't even permit reporters to use laptops in their court rooms. To complicate matters, there is nopress room on the premises where the reporters can work.
  • During one of the breaks in the day’s action, I noticed a court security officer reading—with what appeared to be interest—Luis Posada Carriles: Notes from a Tribunal, a pamphlet about a 2008 panel on the Posada case that anti-Posada demonstators were distributing yesterday.
  • The El Paso Times asked its readers to weigh in on how best to deal with Luis Posada. 73.8 per cent of the 378 people who voted said Posada should be tried on terrorism charges; 13.22 per cent argued authorities should leave him alone—"he's an old man—and 12.96 per cent declared him "innocent" of the charges against him.

 

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Looking for loopholes in El Paso

Cuba's Granma newspaper says Luis Posada Carriles' lawyers are trying to use a legal loophole to prevent the court from hearing key evidence in his case.

Posada, the alleged mastermind of both the 1976 bombing of Cubana Airlines Flight 455 and also the 1997 Havana hotel bombing campaign, is scheduled to go on trial at the Federal Court in El Paso, Texas, in January 2011 on immigration-related charges.

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Bombed Aché disco in Havana.

He's accused of lying in his 2005 application for asylum in the U.S. when he claimed he wasn't involved in the hotel bombing campaign. Those attacks resulted in the death of an Italian-Canadian businessman and injuries to dozens of others.

Prosecutors had intended to use evidence originally gathered in Cuba in connection with the attacks as part of its case but the defence is now arguing that material should be excluded because an earlier court order required such evidence be turned over to the court before December 1, 2009.

The defence claims it won't have time to consider that evidence before the January trial.

Ironically, Posada is not charged with organizing the bombing campaign—a terrorist act—but merely of lying about his involvement—a lesser charge.

 

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    This is the site for What Lies Across the Water: The Real Story of the Cuban Five, collected research and other materials for an in-progress narrative nonfiction book about the Cuban Five by Stephen Kimber.

    The Cuban Five were members of "La Red Avispa"—the Wasp Network—spies Havana dispatched to Florida in the early 1990s to infiltrate militant anti-Castro exile groups that Cuba believed were plotting terrorist attacks on its soil. The Cuban Five were arrested, tried, convicted and sentenced to long prison terms in the United States.

    In the United States, they are virtually unknown. In Cuba, they are heroes.

    That’s the short version of the story. The long version is… well, more complicated... Stay tuned.

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