With a long terrorist record against Cuba,
Alvarez Fernandez-Magriña is one of the closest collaborators of
self-confessed criminal Luis Posada Carriles, and operates with
total impunity in Miami under the façade of a businessman from a
development company, underscored the Cubadebate web site.
Imprisoned since November 2005
along with an unpatriotic person, Osvaldo Mitat, Alvarez
Fernandez-Magriña pleaded guilty of conspiracy to have illegal
weaponry, and admitted his aggressive purposes against Cuba.
Even with this evidence, the US
District Attorney’s Office didn’t press charges on terrorism,
and the two criminals were sentenced to 4 years in jail, reduced
to 11 months in exchange for the voluntary return of an arms
cache that was hidden, the Notimex news agency recalls.
The sentence was reduced despite
the fact that the authorities seized the largest arms cache in
the history of south Florida, made up by 30 automatic rifles, a
rocket launcher, several grenades, over 200 pounds of dynamite,
and 14 pounds of C-4 explosives.
At the end of 2007, Alvarez and
Mitat pleaded guilty of obstructing justice in an investigation
linked to charges of migratory fraud against Posada Carriles and
they refused to testify before a federal grand jury on the
illegal entry of this terrorist to the United States, who is
claimed by Venezuelan justice.
Counsel Jose Pertierra,
Venezuela’s representative in the extradition case against
Posada Carriles told Cubadebate from Washington that Alvarez
Fernandez-Magriña “is not a US citizen.
He’s only a permanent resident and
his criminal record works against his residency”.
Alvarez Fernandez-Magriña enlisted as a mercenary
in the 2506 Brigade (which participated in the Bay of Pigs
invasion of Cuba) and maintained close ties with Florida-based
paramilitary organizations, like Alpha 66 and Comandos L, under
the supervision of the Central Intelligence Agency (the CIA).