The trial's opening weeks focused on documentary and physical evidence
against the five accused spies. With Santos, jurors are hearing firsthand
accounts about the inner workings of Cuba's intelligence apparatus, from
spy recruitment to training to work assignments.
In the case of Santos and his wife, Amarylis -- also a Cuban agent --
their achievements were far less illustrious than their assignments,
according to testimony.
Santos said he successfully completed a research project on the
Southern Command while its new headquarters were being built in Miami's
Doral section in early 1997.
He and his wife took photographs of all the surrounding buildings,
between Northwest 87th and 99th avenues and 25th and 40th streets, ``to
provide a pretty clear idea to anyone'' what the area looked like.
Santos said he gave the report to his handler Lavaniño, an
``illegal agent'' or ranking Cuban intelligence operative who also went by
the name Luis Medina.
But more importantly, Lavaniño told the Santos couple that their
``supreme task'' was to get jobs at the Pentagon's SouthCom headquarters,
which directs U.S. military operations in Latin America and the
Caribbean.
Accused spy González -- who also went by the name Rubén
Campa -- gave them the same task, Santos testified. ``Penetrating''
SouthCom was a high priority set by Cuba's intelligence chiefs, according
to Havana-to-Miami directives seized by the FBI and read to jurors
Monday.
MISSION FAILED
The Santos failed at that assignment. They were too busy trying to make
a legitimate living and never found a place to apply for a job, Santos
said.
But on cross-examination, the defense attorney for accused spy
Hernández scoffed at the notion that Santos could have obtained
anything important -- let alone national defense secrets, a key factor for
proving espionage -- even if he had managed to get hired at SouthCom.
Santos does not speak English. Before his arrest, he was working as a
laborer at Goya Foods and the Miami Arena.
Attorney Paul McKenna read jurors a report in which Hernández
directed Santos to obtain ``public information'' about SouthCom. ``In
fact, none of your handlers ever tasked you with getting national security
information, did they?'' McKenna asked Santos.
Santos responded that it was implicit that he was supposed to get
information that could not be obtained ``by conventional means.''
SERVING SENTENCES
Santos and his wife are already serving prison sentences after pleading
guilty to one count of conspiracy to act as a foreign agent.
Their terms are likely to be cut short for their help testifying
against Hernández, who prosecutors say conspired with the Cuban
military to murder four Brothers to the Rescue fliers in 1996.
McKenna cross-examined Santos about the plea agreement for a long time
in an apparent bid to undermine his credibility. Under sentencing
guidelines, Santos faced 60 months but prosecutors recommended he serve
48. U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard agreed.
``So these people here,'' McKenna said, naming prosecutors Caroline
Heck Miller, John Kastrenakes, David Buckner and FBI Agent Al Alonso --
``are all your friends that are helping you, correct?''
``They're not my friends,'' Santos responded through an
interpreter. ``I met those people during the investigation of the
case.''
Jailed Cuban spy identifies his `handlers'
Copyright 2001 Miami Herald