Marifeli Perez-Stable [L]/ latinamericanstudies.org |
Juan Tamayo
Miami Herald
Good morning Juan,
I noticed that in your article in today’s Herald (http://www.miamiherald.com/ 2012/06/06/ 2836372/cuban-police-arrest- top-aide-to.html) you
indicate that Mercedes Arce “was mentioned in Florida International
University professor Carlos Alvarez’s confession that he worked for
Cuban intelligence.” I brought that to your attention in the exchange
of emails on October-November 2009 that I sent you, Miami Herald
Ombudsman Edward Schumacher-Matos and Herald Editorial Page Editor
Myriam Marquez, that I copied other Herald editors and posted on my
academic website at http://www. latinamericanstudies.org/ espionage/Miami-Herald-spy- polemic.htm
In those emails I stated that “Herald editors and reporters demonstrate
naiveté when asking [Marifeli] Pérez-Stable to admit to the same
espionage criminal activities for which her friend and colleague
Professor Carlos Alvarez was sent to prison. Your article omits that it
was Alvarez, during his FBI interrogation, who admitted that Mercedes
Arce was his intelligence handler (p. 80-82) http://www. latinamericanstudies.org/ espionage/Alvarez-spy-1.pdf and linked her (p. 489) to Pérez-Stable. http://www. latinamericanstudies.org/ espionage/Alvarez-spy-6.pdf
My email on November 5, 2009, to Ms. Marquez concluded by indicating:
“Hopefully, what people will remember is that Perez-Stable and her
intimate friend Mercedes Arce are spies and the Herald suppressed the
truth.”
Two-and-a-half years later, the Miami Herald now acknowledges that
Mercedes Arce worked for Cuban intelligence but selectively omits and
continues to suppress the link between her and Miami Herald Board of
Contributors member and FIU professor Marifeli Perez-Stable. The Alvarez
deposition revealed that Arce stayed in the residence of Perez-Stable
when she visited Miami.
Sincerely,
Antonio de la Cova, Ph.D.
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