Authors: Lamar Waldron
seasoned men to their drug network. Within a few years, this new exile
influx would accelerate a major shift in the Mafia’s heroin and cocaine
networks, leading to new CIA exile drug scandals in the 1970s and ’80s.
But in 1967, the usual French Connection heroin routes through Mexico
City and port cities like Montreal and New Orleans were still going
strong. Because of Michel Mertz’s political and intelligence ties, he had
not yet been arrested for the earlier Fort Benning bust, so his allies in
Montreal and Mexico were free to prosper.
The Montreal World’s Fair that began in the spring of 1967, popularly
known as Expo 67, was the unlikely catalyst for both Cuban-exile
terrorism and a rise in Canadian heroin trafficking. It also helped to
bring together drug running and gunrunning operations involving the
Mafia, Cuban exiles, and far-right racists—including an escaped convict
(detailed shortly) named James Earl Ray, who would soon travel from
the US to England and Canada.
Felipe Rivero’s Cuban Nationalist Movement (CNM) had only about
a dozen members, but according to the FBI, it “claimed credit for acts of
violence committed in England, Canada, and the United States.” Rivero
was the aristocratic-exile friend of Alberto Fowler, the sophisticated
Cuban assisting Jim Garrison in 1967. Fowler’s work for Garrison might
be characterized more accurately as diverting suspicion from himself,
Rivero, and other exiles who hated JFK. Garrison didn’t know about
Fowler’s close friendship with Rivero, who had helped Fowler shadow
JFK the day before the Tampa assassination attempt, nor was Garrison
aware that just hours after Lee Oswald’s arrest, Fowler had tried to
spread disinformation about Oswald to Harry Williams. Instead, Gar-
rison told
Life
magazine writer Richard Billings that “Alberto Fowler
[was one of the] legit Cubans who have contempt for wildcat, outlaw
Cubans.”8
Both Fowler and Rivero had worked for the CIA during the Bay of
Pigs operation, but by 1967 Rivero and his small but violent CNM exile
group were similar to the more deadly racist groups in the South. Miami
authorities described Rivero as a neo-Nazi; he was a Holocaust denier at
a time when the Ku Klux Klan was stepping up its anti-Semitic violence.
Anti-Semitism was just one trait that the Miami-based Rivero shared
with white supremacists like Joseph Milteer, who made regular visits to
Miami. Both men belonged to organizations that also trafficked in arms
and explosives, and some of these deals were brokered by the Mafia.
Both men also had associates involved in drug trafficking.9
450
LEGACY OF SECRECY
It’s important to stress that the vast majority of Cuban exiles didn’t
share Felipe Rivero’s extremist politics. However, the violence of Rivero
and his associates would drive many more moderate exiles out of the
movement, leading to a wave of terrorist exile bombings and killings
in the 1970s, including Rivero’s terrorist bombing of Chilean diplomat
Orlando Letelier in Washington, D.C.10
Exiles like Rivero had learned, or been told, to attack Cuban interests
only outside the US, a policy that evokes CIA guidelines dating back to
1963. While there is no evidence that the CIA supported Rivero directly
in 1967, some in the Agency would have liked his results: increasing
psychological pressure on Cuban officials over their presence at Expo 67,
with minimal damage and no loss of life—and no obvious connection to
the CIA. Some writers feel that at various times the CIA was assisting, or
at least tacitly approving, Rivero’s associates. The idea is not inconceiv-
able, since CIA files confirm that the Agency did employ bombers, like
Luis Posada, at the time. The bottom line is that the hazy lines of CIA
command and support allowed men like Rivero and Posada to operate,
often with tragic results.
Seven months before the April 27, 1967, opening of Expo 67, one of
Rivero’s members allegedly used a bazooka to attack the Cuban embassy
in Ottawa, Canada’s capital. Just three weeks before the Expo’s opening,
the FBI had questioned the same Rivero operative and his brother about
the Montreal bombings of a restaurant and a Canadian company that
did business with Cuba.11 The focus of exile violence shifted briefly to
Mexico on May 3, 1967, when four people were wounded after someone
threw a bomb into the car of Cuba’s ambassador.12
According to the
Miami News
, US authorities arrested Felipe Rivero
on May 12, 1967, and “charged [him] with threatening to blow up the
Cuban pavilion at Expo 67.”13 The FBI said that Rivero’s supporters
tried to rally exiles in Florida for a general strike on his behalf, but
when a more moderate exile group (RECE) “opposed the general strike
and” urged “Cuban exiles to not participate . . . the office of RECE was
bombed [and] almost completely destroyed.” Two of Rivero’s men were
arrested for that bombing, but charges were later dropped against one
of them.14
Rivero and his men had more plans for Expo 67 and Montreal: While
Rivero remained in a Dade County jail, the FBI said that two of Rivero’s
men “went to Montreal, Canada, by automobile [and] at Expo 67 . . . placed
a bomb under a bridge adjacent to the Cuban Pavilion. The bomb sub-
sequently exploded.” However, the bridge shielded the Cuban Pavilion
from the blast. To ensure the incident garnered attention, Rivero’s
group issued a statement in Miami, proudly taking responsibility for
the attack.15 The FBI reported that four days later, on June 3, 1967, two
of Rivero’s men met with another exile leader and “Tony Varona [to
discuss] a two-pronged plan to assassinate the Cuban Ambassador to
Canada and to attack a Cuban ship in Montreal.”16
Because of Rivero’s bombing campaign, and information that the FBI
picked up about additional exile attacks planned for Montreal and Expo
67, Canadian authorities had to increase the city’s security—especially
at Expo 67, where attendance would suffer if visitors did not feel secure.
Yet a heavily armed presence would hardly yield the type of fun atmo-
sphere that Expo organizers knew attendees wanted. Only one type of
Canadian security wouldn’t clash with, and would actually enhance, the
Fair’s festive atmosphere: red-jacketed officers of the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police (RCMP).
Unfortunately, many of the RCMP members diverted to security
duty at Expo 67 came from their expert narcotics squad, which was
then dealing with a surge of heroin into Montreal and Toronto. While
much of the world thinks of the RCMP as horse-riding Mounties, most
of its members do the same type of investigative work as the FBI. The
RCMP was close to tracking down the source of the new heroin surge,
which involved members of the same Mertz/Trafficante/Marcello
heroin network busted at Fort Benning the previous year. According
to Canadian crime reporter Jean-Pierre Charbonneau, when Canadian
authorities increased security, “experienced [narcotics squad] officers
suddenly found themselves in scarlet RCMP tunics patrolling [Expo 67].
For six months the Narcotics Squad ceased functioning [thus creating]
an unhoped-for opportunity for traffickers” in the summer and fall of
1967.17 Felipe Rivero’s bombing campaign hadn’t produced major dam-
age or deaths, but it did have the unintended effect of creating a rush
to smuggle more heroin through Montreal. Seasoned criminals would
soon be recruited to help with the increased narcotics traffic, among
them James Earl Ray.
As 1967 progressed, two major personnel losses—Win Scott and Des-
mond FitzGerald—would further complicate Richard Helms’s and the
CIA’s increasingly problematic anti-Castro operations. Win Scott was
the CIA Station Chief in Mexico City, as he had been in 1963. Mexico City
remained an important station for anti-Castro operations, since it both
housed a Cuban embassy (subject to extensive electronic surveillance
452
LEGACY OF SECRECY
by the CIA) and offered regular flights to Havana, sometimes utilized
by CIA agents like Tony Sforza, an operative for David Morales.18
Win Scott’s biographer, Jefferson Morley, writes that in the wake of
the IG Report and the CIA memo directing CIA Station Chiefs to support
the Warren Report’s “lone nut/magic bullet” theory, “Scott responded
by ordering a comprehensive review of his Oswald files. Then he
retired and wrote his memoir disputing the Warren Report.” Morley
thinks “Scott wrote his JFK conspiracy theory mainly to protect himself
[because] he knew that top officials—including himself, Angleton, and . . .
David Atlee Phillips—had far more knowledge about Oswald’s travels
and intentions than the American people could imagine.”19
Scott’s departure no doubt had a negative impact on anti-Castro oper-
ations, especially since Deputy Director for Plans Desmond FitzGerald’s
health was in sharp decline, though he still forced himself to show up for
work each day. Even while Felipe Rivero remained in jail for attempting
to blow up the Cuban Pavilion at Expo 67, CIA files confirm that the
Agency continued to employ bombing expert Luis Posada. Posada was
working with an alleged Mafia figure who would later manage a Las
Vegas casino following a deal brokered by Carlos Marcello. According
to a CIA report to the FBI on June 27, 1967, this man was “tied in with
organized crime figures in [the] Miami area and also involved with 7
recent bombings in Miami.” The man got “in touch with Posada” by
going through Norman Rothman, who had worked for Trafficante in
Havana and also run guns with Jack Ruby and Carlos Prio. The man
“understands Posada [was] attached with [the] CIA and claims Posada
supplied him with caps, primers, and C-4 explosives.” The CIA admits
its Miami headquarters had previously okayed Posada’s work for the
man, giving him “hand grenades and silencers.”20
Perhaps someone in the CIA realized it might look odd for the US to
prosecute bombers like Felipe Rivero while a bomber like Posada was a
full-time CIA employee. A CIA memo claims “Posada [was] terminated
7/11/67 because he resigned from position as military coordinator for
RECE. JMWAVE does not have current need.” However, other CIA files
place Posada’s termination as a full-time employee in 1968, and, in any
event, an Agency memo admits that the CIA rehired Posada almost
immediately “as an independent contractor from 1968–75.” Another CIA
memo says the Agency retained “Posada [until] 2-13-76,” even though
three years earlier the CIA was “sure that Posada [was] involved with
narcotics drug trafficking”—confirming previous reports that “Posada
may be involved in smuggling cocaine . . . to Miami.”21
All of this information had a three-part implication for CIA Cuban
operations in 1967. First, the CIA was trying to downgrade its violent
operatives to a less official status, while still using them. Second, CIA
records, as in the case of Posada’s service dates, were sometimes fudged or
altered when the operative was linked to terrorism or political scandals—
in Posada’s case, that included his involvement in the bombing of a
Cubana airliner, work for the CIA in Iran-Contra, and later attempts to
assassinate Fidel Castro. Finally, drugs were an increasing aspect of anti-
Castro operations in the late 1960s and early ’70s, and the CIA did not
regard drug trafficking (and contact with the Mafia) as a reason to ter-
minate certain operatives. As the CIA had written about Manuel Artime
and AMWORLD in 1964, perhaps the impression that covertly backed
CIA exiles got their weapons and explosives from Mafiosi benefited the
CIA more than the impression that the agency had provided them.22
The bottom line is that the CIA’s method of operation made it increas-
ingly difficult to determine which exiles were actually working for the
CIA—and where their allegiance ultimately lay. That situation had been
a problem while JFK was still alive, and it continued even as CIA super-
vision of exile operatives decreased. The soft treatment of some arrested
exiles might indicate which Cuban exiles were supported or sanctioned
by the CIA. Felipe Rivero’s two men who had been arrested for firing
a bazooka at the UN in 1964 were also questioned in the 1967 Montreal
bombings and “arrested [in the Montreal case] by Jersey City PD for pos-
session of explosives,” according to a June 29, 1967, FBI report. However,
both were released on only a small bond by July 10, 1967.23
In the summer of 1967, Felipe Rivero’s men formed an alliance with
another group, headed by Cuban exile Juan Bosch. A July 14, 1967, FBI
report says that one of Bosch’s men negotiated with a “Cuban exile
arms dealer in Miami . . . to order .30 and .50 caliber machine guns, a 20
millimeter cannon, a 57 millimeter recoilless rifle, and a large amount