The Miami Herald
January 13, 2001

Plots against Castro outlined

Defense refocuses Cuban spy trial

 BY GAIL EPSTEIN NIEVES

 Trying to turn the tables on the government, attorneys for five accused Cuban
 spies spent Friday outlining a play-by-play of anti-Castro plots -- some committed
 by violent Cuban exiles, others by the U.S. government.

 Jurors heard limited testimony about the plots. But just by raising the issue, the
 lawyers refocused attention from Cuba's spying apparatus and reinforced a key
 defense argument: that Cuba is justified in infiltrating exile groups as a means of
 protecting the country from violence.

 Retired FBI Agent Stuart Hoyt, an expert in Cuban counterintelligence, confirmed
 that Cuba has shared information about violent exile groups with the United
 States, albeit ``on a limited basis.''

 Hoyt testified that the FBI made trips to Cuba ``about two or three times'' that he
 knew about. And ``two officials from Cuba brought some evidence up to be
 examined, probably over a year ago, less than two years ago,'' he said, not
 elaborating.

 Cuba blames exile terrorists for a string of bombings at hotels and tourist sites.
 Leader Fidel Castro has criticized the U.S. government for failing to rein in such
 activists, even after Havana furnished information about them during the past
 decade.

 The value of some of the information was questionable, however, sources involved
 with the contacts have told The Herald.

 On Friday, defense lawyers Paul McKenna and Joaquin Méndez questioned Hoyt
 -- who remains under FBI contract -- about a ``who's who'' of Cuban exiles linked
 to anti-Castro plots.

 SPY TARGETS

 All of the activists were identified as spy targets in Havana-Miami
 communications seized from the defendants.

 They included:

   Guillermo Novo, 61, a member of the defunct terrorist group Omega 7 who was
 convicted in the 1976 bombing murder of former Chilean diplomat Orlando Letelier
 in Washington, D.C. The verdict was overturned on appeal, and Novo was
 acquitted in a second trial.

 Novo also was one of four Cuban exiles arrested Nov. 17 in Panama City,
 Panama, in connection with an alleged plot to kill Castro during a Latin American
 summit there. The men are charged with ``illicit association'' and possession of
 explosives.

   Luis Posada Carriles, 70, a former CIA operative also under arrest in Panama,
 who authorities say has admitted he planned to assassinate Castro with a car
 bomb, but changed his mind at the last minute.

 Posada has confessed to masterminding about a dozen bombings of Havana
 tourist spots in 1997, including one that killed an Italian tourist.

   Orlando Bosch, who was held in a Venezuelan jail for 11 years on charges of
 masterminding the October 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner that killed all 73
 people on board. After 11 years without conviction or acquittal, he was released
 and returned to Miami in 1988. Posada was sentenced to death in absentia for
 allegedly planning the attack with Bosch.

 Hoyt, the Cuban counterintelligence specialist, professed little first-hand
 knowledge about the attacks.

 Defense attorneys McKenna and Philip Horowitz also focused attention on U.S.
 intelligence operations.

 McKenna represents Gerardo Hernández.

 Horowitz represents René González.

 ``Isn't it true the CIA carried out assassination attempts against Fidel Castro?''
 asked McKenna.

 Assistant U.S. Attorney David Buckner jumped up to object.

 Sustained, said U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard.

 Are you aware of Operation Mongoose, a Miami-based CIA effort to kill Castro
 after the 1961 Bay of Pigs failed? McKenna asked.

 Again, Hoyt was told not to answer.

 Apparently to rebut any suggestion that Cuba alone infiltrates Miami's exile
 groups, Horowitz asked Hoyt whether the FBI does the same. Yes, Hoyt said,
 ``probably since exile groups came into play.''

 Hoyt gave high marks to Cuba's foreign espionage operation, calling it
 ``sophisticated'' and ``very good'' despite its financial limitations.

 U.S. SECURITY

 But under cross-examination by attorneys Jack Blumenfeld and Bill Norris, Hoyt
 acknowledged that any Cuban spy snooping for ``top secret'' U.S. military secrets
 would be hampered by a host of security measures.

 The attorneys sought to discredit the testimony of witness Joseph Santos, an
 admitted ex-spy who testified that accused spies Hernández, Fernando González
 and Ramón Labañino directed him to infiltrate the Pentagon's Southern Command
 in West Miami-Dade County.

 `TOP SECRET'

 Co-defendant Antonio Guerrero is accused of trying to learn about ``top secret''
 activity at the Boca Chica Naval Air Station at Key West.

 Hoyt agreed that just because Guerrero thought the activity was top secret, that
 didn't necessarily make it so.

 The trial will resume Tuesday.