INSIGHT WEB EXCLUSIVE
Cuban Diplomats Fight "Hand-to-Hand Combat" Against
Demonstrators --
Rule of Law?

4/21/00 - By J. Michael Waller

As the Justice Department crafted plans to remove Cuban refugee
Elian
Gonzalez from his great-uncle's house by force, the State
Department
plotted to protect Cuban diplomats who assaulted pro-Elian
demonstrators.

As with the Arianne Horta story (see "The Arianne Horta Story,"
May 8)
the national press in both Cuba and America seem oblivious to
what's
going on other than snapping pictures of the 6-year-old boy playing
in
his great uncle's front yard.

Meanwhile, in Washington, the big media virtually have ignored an
out-of-control melee on April 14 in which Cuban diplomats attacked
and
beat a small group of demonstrators supporting the Gonzalez boy.

The Washington Post, among others, reported superficial details of
the
amazing brawl that broke out but, oddly, failed to report the full
story let alone what happened and in context. And it's an amazing
story.

Insight has learned, based on confidential Secret Service and
Metropolitan Police reports obtained by the magazine, that an
officer
on the scene described the unprovoked Cuban attack as "hand-to-
hand
combat" against women and men, alike.

Moreover, statements made by U.S. government spokesmen who
routinely
speak of the rule of law and lambaste the "adopted" family of Elian
Gonzalez have tried to gloss what only can be described as a
diplomatic cover-up.

Here are the ugly facts as recorded by the police and, Insight has
learned, captured on secret videotapes by federal agents stationed
at
the scene.

Small groups of nonviolent protesters had gathered in front of the
Cuban mission on April 14. Then, toward early evening, a band of
Cuban
diplomats, alleged to have been drinking, charged across the 16th
Street corridor separating the Cuban Interests Section and the
demonstrators to engage in "hand-to-hand" combat with anti-Castro
protesters.

Screaming obscenities and yelling threats, the gang of
approximately
10 diplomats, who had taken off their coats, ties and jewelry began
attacking indiscriminately with fists and sticks, injuring even a
Secret Service officer.

"During the course of the demonstration, in which American and
Cuban
flags as well as signs and placards were displayed, a group of
approximately 10 people came out of the embassy and engaged in
hand-to-hand combat with the group of 20 demonstrators," wrote
Uniformed Secret Service Officer Matthew D. Schaeffer, who
witnessed
the incident from his cruiser.

Another officer, Kenneth E. Buczkowski, radioed for backup. After
reinforcements arrived, law-enforcement units separated the two
groups
but made no attempt at arrests. Diplomatic immunity prevailed,
apparently.

The Washington Post reported that the Cuban officials attacked in
response to provocations by demonstrators and to alleged
harassment of
a female colleague.

But the police reports had anyone bothered to secure them showed
an
entirely different story. In fact, the incident referred to in the
Post occurred several hours before the melee and injuries inflicted
by
the Cuban diplomats. And the incident referred to by the Post and
other news outlets involved only a single demonstrator, who had
made
lewd hand gestures at a Cuban official's chauffeur.

According to a copy of that incident report filed by a Secret Service
officer, the individual was seen immediately to "depart the area"
after being observed "spitting in the direction of a second Cuban
staff member as she was crossing 16th Street."

Much, much later, however, is when, as characterized by police and
witnesses interviewed, Cuban diplomats launched what appeared
to be a
premeditated and organized assault. Before leaving the mission, the
Cuban officials removed their coats, jewelry and rings.

An eyewitness told police that two groups of Cuban officials
gathered
at the gate of the compound, based in the Swiss Embassy at 2630
16th
Street NW, waited until the gate opened, and commenced the
assault.

"They immediately attacked us with fists and sticks," Victor Andres
Triay, a professor at Middlesex Community College in Connecticut,
told
police. "The men came out deliberately to beat us."

Two other demonstrators said they saw a Cuban official videotaping
the
attack with a camcorder.

Sources tell Insight that the Cuban officials had been drinking before
the assault. Officer Schaeffer wrote: "Ten 'unidentified' Cuban
employees of the mission came out and began to assault the
demonstrators on the front sidewalk. Units responded to separate
the
two groups and the Cuban employees were 'forced' back into their
mission.

"Eleven of the demonstrators filed complaints for simple assault.
The
Cuban First Secretary [Felix Wilson Hernandez] was interviewed
and
refused to provide a list of names of possible suspects."

Federal law-enforcement sources tell Insight that the United States
knows the identities of each of the Cuban assailants because of
close,
24-hour surveillance of the facility, and that the incident should
result in the expulsion of the officials from the United States.

"We thought they were going to talk to us," said Maria Mercedes
Alonso. "No, they came out swinging fists hit a woman first [and]
proceeded to throw punches, beat our backs with flag rods."

"They tackled some of the women in the group and dragged them
out into
the street," said Mauricio Claver Carone, a student. "The two
officers
on site were not enough to control the situation, so they kept
brutally attacking us despite the officers' fruitless efforts to end
the attack."

Estrella Noda, an employee of the Department of Housing and
Urban
Development, told police, "Two men from the group charged
directly at
me, picked me up after tackling me and punched me on my head,
arms and
back and left me laying in the street."

Eyewitness Jose Truman Acurna, who lives near the Cuban facility,
told
police that the Cuban officials "started hitting everyone women, too.
I saw them pick up the woman there [Noda] and throw her to the
pavement."

Several of the attacked victims, including Alonso and Noda, filed
assault complaints. Jorge Benitez, a Virginia student, wrote in a
complaint to the Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Police
Department that
the Cuban officials "stormed down the driveway of the Cuban
Interests
Section. They shouted obscenities in Spanish, and they rolled up
their
sleeves. They yelled to us that 'prepare to be punished' and 'now
you
will get what you deserve' in Spanish."

Benitez's wife Bridgida, an attorney with Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering,
says in an assault report: "The men physically attacked all the
members of the protest, including women. One man pushed me
into the
street.... I was hit at least twice by two different men. I can
identify them."

Ironically, Bridgida Benitez works for the very law firm that recently
defended a Cuban intelligence officer named Jose Imperatori, whom
the
United States expelled earlier this year for running an alleged spy
within the Immigration and Naturalization Service in Miami.

Spokesmen from the White House and the State Department have
said they
have filed "strong" protests with the Cuban Interests Section as well
as in a cable to Fidel Castro. But they also have downplayed the
incident as not being serious or involving any large group of people.
Descriptions are similar to what newspapers have reported that it
was
only one or two people involved in a skirmish.

As with the Arianne Horta story, the only woman to survive the
treacherous journey with Elian Gonzales, her struggle to get her
6-year-old daughter out of Cuba has been ignored. Yet the press
and
the officials in Cuba and the United States continue to stress the
rule of law.

Attorney General Janet Reno and INS officials have insisted on
upholding the parental rights of Juan Miguel Gonzalez and to
devise a
"rescue" plan to free Elian. But as Mrs. Horta has learned, the
victims of the vicious assault by the Cuban diplomats on April 14
should expect little help.










































INSIGHT WEB EXCLUSIVE
Cuban Diplomats Fight "Hand-to-Hand Combat" Against
Demonstrators -- Rule of Law?

4/21/00 - By J. Michael Waller
As the Justice Department crafted plans to remove Cuban refugee
Elian Gonzalez from his great-uncle's house by force, the State
Department plotted to protect Cuban diplomats who assaulted pro-
Elian demonstrators.
As with the Arianne Horta story (see "The Arianne Horta Story,"
May 8 ) � the national press in both Cuba and America seem
oblivious to what's going on other than snapping pictures of the 6-
year-old boy playing in his great uncle's front yard.
Meanwhile, in Washington, the big media virtually have ignored an out-of-control melee 
on April 14 in which Cuban diplomats attacked and beat a small group of demonstrators 
supporting the Gonzalez boy.
The Washington Post, among others, reported superficial details of the amazing brawl 
that broke out but, oddly, failed to report the full story � let alone what happened 
and in context. And it's an amazing story.
Insight has learned, based on confidential Secret Service and Metropolitan Police 
reports obtained by the magazine, that an officer on the scene described the 
unprovoked Cuban attack as "hand-to-hand combat" against women
 and men, alike.
Moreover, statements made by U.S. government spokesmen who routinely speak of the rule 
of law and lambaste the "adopted" family of Elian Gonzalez have tried to gloss what 
only can be described as a diplomatic cover-up.
Here are the ugly facts as recorded by the police and, Insight has learned, captured 
on secret videotapes by federal agents stationed at the scene.
Small groups of nonviolent protesters had gathered in front of the Cuban mission on 
April 14. Then, toward early evening, a band of Cuban diplomats, alleged to have been 
drinking, charged across the 16th Street corridor s
eparating the Cuban Interests Section and the demonstrators to engage in 
"hand-to-hand" combat with anti-Castro protesters.
Screaming obscenities and yelling threats, the gang of approximately 10 diplomats, who 
had taken off their coats, ties and jewelry began attacking indiscriminately with 
fists and sticks, injuring even a Secret Service off
icer.
"During the course of the demonstration, in which American and Cuban flags as well as 
signs and placards were displayed, a group of approximately 10 people came out of the 
embassy and engaged in hand-to-hand combat with t
he group of 20 demonstrators," wrote Uniformed Secret Service Officer Matthew D. 
Schaeffer, who witnessed the incident from his cruiser.
Another officer, Kenneth E. Buczkowski, radioed for backup. After reinforcements 
arrived, law-enforcement units separated the two groups but made no attempt at 
arrests. Diplomatic immunity prevailed, apparently.
The Washington Post reported that the Cuban officials attacked in response to 
provocations by demonstrators and to alleged harassment of a female colleague.
But the police reports � had anyone bothered to secure them � showed an entirely 
different story. In fact, the incident referred to in the Post occurred several hours 
before the melee and injuries inflicted by the Cuban d
iplomats. And the incident referred to by the Post and other news outlets involved 
only a single demonstrator, who had made lewd hand gestures at a Cuban official's 
chauffeur.
According to a copy of that incident report filed by a Secret Service officer, the 
individual was seen immediately to "depart the area" after being observed "spitting in 
the direction of a second Cuban staff member as she
 was crossing 16th Street."
Much, much later, however, is when, as characterized by police and witnesses 
interviewed, Cuban diplomats launched what appeared to be a premeditated and organized 
assault. Before leaving the mission, the Cuban officials
removed their coats, jewelry and rings.
An eyewitness told police that two groups of Cuban officials gathered at the gate of 
the compound, based in the Swiss Embassy at 2630 16th Street NW, waited until the gate 
opened, and commenced the assault.
"They immediately attacked us with fists and sticks," Victor Andres Triay, a professor 
at Middlesex Community College in Connecticut, told police. "The men came out 
deliberately to beat us."
Two other demonstrators said they saw a Cuban official videotaping the attack with a 
camcorder.
Sources tell Insight that the Cuban officials had been drinking before the assault. 
Officer Schaeffer wrote: "Ten 'unidentified' Cuban employees of the mission came out 
and began to assault the demonstrators on the front
sidewalk. Units responded to separate the two groups and the Cuban employees were 
'forced' back into their mission.
"Eleven of the demonstrators filed complaints for simple assault. The Cuban First 
Secretary [Felix Wilson Hernandez] was interviewed and refused to provide a list of 
names of possible suspects."
Federal law-enforcement sources tell Insight that the United States knows the 
identities of each of the Cuban assailants because of close, 24-hour surveillance of 
the facility, and that the incident should result in the e
xpulsion of the officials from the United States.
"We thought they were going to talk to us," said Maria Mercedes Alonso. "No, they came 
out swinging fists � hit a woman first [and] proceeded to throw punches, beat our 
backs with flag rods."
"They tackled some of the women in the group and dragged them out into the street," 
said Mauricio Claver Carone, a student. "The two officers on site were not enough to 
control the situation, so they kept brutally attacki
ng us despite the officers' fruitless efforts to end the attack."
Estrella Noda, an employee of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, told 
police, "Two men from the group charged directly at me, picked me up after tackling me 
and punched me on my head, arms and back and left
me laying in the street."
Eyewitness Jose Truman Acurna, who lives near the Cuban facility, told police that the 
Cuban officials "started hitting everyone � women, too. I saw them pick up the woman 
there [Noda] and throw her to the pavement."
Several of the attacked victims, including Alonso and Noda, filed assault complaints. 
Jorge Benitez, a Virginia student, wrote in a complaint to the Washington, D.C., 
Metropolitan Police Department that the Cuban official
s "stormed down the driveway of the Cuban Interests Section. They shouted obscenities 
in Spanish, and they rolled up their sleeves. They yelled to us that 'prepare to be 
punished' and 'now you will get what you deserve' i
n Spanish."
Benitez's wife Bridgida, an attorney with Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering, says in an 
assault report: "The men physically attacked all the members of the protest, including 
women. One man pushed me into the street.... I was hi
t at least twice by two different men. I can identify them."
Ironically, Bridgida Benitez works for the very law firm that recently defended a 
Cuban intelligence officer named Jose Imperatori, whom the United States expelled 
earlier this year for running an alleged spy within the I
mmigration and Naturalization Service in Miami.
Spokesmen from the White House and the State Department have said they have filed 
"strong" protests with the Cuban Interests Section as well as in a cable to Fidel 
Castro. But they also have downplayed the incident as not
 being serious or involving any large group of people. Descriptions are similar to 
what newspapers have reported � that it was only one or two people involved in a 
skirmish.
As with the Arianne Horta story, the only woman to survive the treacherous journey 
with Elian Gonzales, her struggle to get her 6-year-old daughter out of Cuba has been 
ignored. Yet the press and the officials in Cuba and
 the United States continue to stress the rule of law.
Attorney General Janet Reno and INS officials have insisted on upholding the parental 
rights of Juan Miguel Gonzalez and to devise a "rescue" plan to free Elian. But as 
Mrs. Horta has learned, the victims of the vicious a
ssault by the Cuban diplomats on April 14 should expect little help.

































--
Kathleen

Having nothing, nothing can he lose.
-William Shakespeare: Henry VI


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