Terrorist
conspiracies could help
case of the Five
•
According to Los Angeles Times
article
BY JEAN-GUY
ALLARD—Special for Granma International—
THE
most recent revelations about conspiracies by anti-Cuban
counterrevolutionary groups in the United States
could help the case of the Cuban Five, according to
a U.S. newspaper, the Los Angeles Times.
The article in the important California daily
notes that Gerardo Hernández, Fernando González,
Antonio Guerrero, Ramón Labañino and René González
were sentenced five years ago and "fought the
federal charges of conspiracy to commit espionage
during their 2001 trial by arguing that they were
here to infiltrate radical Cuban exile groups that
had devised and executed dozens of missions to
topple the Communist government in Cuba..."
In an article titled "Anti-Castro Disclosures
Could Help Case of ‘Cuban Five,’"
Carol J. Williams, staff writer for the state’s
largest-circulation daily, writes that the
revelations related to terrorists Toñin Llama,
Robert Ferro and Santiago Alvarez could help lead to
a new trial for the Five.
The article refers to the case of the yacht La
Esperanza, seized in Puerto Rico with armaments
on board as it was heading for Isla Margarita to
assassinate Fidel. It also notes that recently in
Miami, José Antonio Llama admitted that he "financed
a 1997 mission to kill Castro for which he had
already been tried and acquitted."
It also cites the case of Californian Robert
Ferro, who "said in April that he collected 1,500
guns and grenades for an assault on Cuba."
The article’s author notes that the trial of
Santiago Alvarez on charges of trying to organize "an
attack on Castro" begins next month.
"We are following these new developments and when
we feel we are closer to having the full story, we
will be bringing it to the Court's attention,"
attorney Leonard Weinglass told the daily.
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MIAMI
5