Cuba charges 6 suspects with terrorism in fatal shooting involving US-flagged speedboat
/News/AP
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Cuba said Wednesday it has filed terrorism charges against six suspects it claims were aboard a Florida-flagged speedboat that was allegedly opened fire on the soldiers in waters off the north coast of the island.
The Prosecutor’s Office said in a statement that the suspects of Cuban origin remain in preventive detention and added that it will guarantee “due process” while continuing to act “in defense of our people and the country’s institutions.”
The government has said that 10 heavily armed Cuban Americans who were aboard the ship opened fire as they attempted to infiltrate the island to commit acts of terrorism. He said Cuban soldiers returned fire and killed four suspects.
However, the White House confirmed to News themezone last week that At least one American was one of four people killed. The news was first reported by Axios.
In addition to the slain U.S. citizen, a U.S. official confirmed to News themezone that at least one U.S. citizen was also among those arrested. At least one of the ship’s occupants had a K-1 visa, the official said, which allows a citizen’s fiancé to travel to the United States to marry, and others are believed to be legal permanent residents of the United States, although it was not clear how many.
According to the official and an incident report from the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office in Florida, the boat’s owner alleged that the vessel had been stolen by an employee.
The Cuban government revealed items allegedly found on the ship, including a dozen high-powered weapons, more than 12,800 ammunition and 11 pistols.

Chief Prosecutor Edward Robert Campbell has told The News that terrorism charges carry a possible sentence of up to 30 years in prison or even the death penalty, although Cuba has maintained a moratorium on the latter since 2003.
the brother of one of the men who was murdered In the incident he said that his brother was obsessed with overthrowing the Cuban government.
Misael Ortega Casanova, brother of Michael Ortega Casanova, told the AP that his brother had fallen into an “obsessive and diabolical” quest to free Cuba from its communist government. Cubans in the United States and Cuban Americans have long protested against the current Cuban government and accused the island’s leaders of human rights violations.
“They became so obsessed that they didn’t think about the consequences or their own lives,” Casanova said of his brother and the other men who were aboard the ship.
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