President's Visit to
Miami
18 December 1963
SS Report dated Dec. 30, 1963
December 30, 1963
Mr. James J. Rowley
Chief, U.S. Secret Service,
Washington, D.C.
Sir:
RE: President's Visit to Miami, Fla.
On November 18, 1963, to address
the Inter-American Press Association
Reference is made to Final Survey Report dated December 11,
1963,
submitted by Special Agent L. F. de Freese (Office 1-16),
relating to
the captioned visit of the President to Miami, Florida.
Submitted as an appendix to the referenced report is the
following information relating to Protective Research.
PROTECTIVE RESEARCH
Upon receipt of official notice of the President's scheduled
visit to
the Miami, Florida, on November 18, 1963, a representative
of the Miami
office personally met with official representatives of the
Federal
Bureau of Investigation, Miami, as well as the Central
Intelligence
Agency, and discussed with them those areas of intelligence
pertinent
to the general security survey, and established liaison for
the free
flow of intelligence information of interest to the United
States
Secret Service.
Official contact was also established with intelligence
units of local
police departments, as well as with source of confidential
information
integrated within the Cuban community of Miami, Florida.
On November 5, 1963, Mr. Richard E. Yager, Public Service
Coordinator,
The Miami Herald, Miami, Florida, made available to this
office a list
of members of the Inter American Press Association expected
to attend
the scheduled function, including the head table and
near-head table
guests, as well as the IAPA delegates, associates,
observers, and
invited guests. A copy of the above list was forwarded
to the
Protective Research Section.
Through Mr. Charles A. Bogdahn, General Manager of the
Americana Hotel,
Miami Beach, Florida, a list containing 61 names of
permanent employees
of the Americana Hotel, as well as a list containing 20
names of extra
employees furnished by the Hotel Employees Union Local 255,
all of whom
were expected to have access to areas in the proximity of
the
President, were furnished to this office for appropriate
clearance. All of the permanent employees of the
Americana Hotel
were found to have police clearance. (See attached
list). From
the list of names submitted by the Hotel Employees Union
Local 255,
Joseph Sestock and Jose Triana were found to have police
records and
they were removed from the list. They were replaced by
Jack
Schamis and Leon Freedman, who were subsequently cleared.
From a confidential source, whose reliability is unknown,
information
was received indicating that two dissidents, unidentified
members of
Cuban Brigade 2506 were planning to embarrass the President
by
demanding that the flag of Brigade 2506, which was presented
to the
President at the Orange Bowl, be returned to them by the
President. (The above information was subsequently
confirmed by
3-11-14).
The last unknown information regarding the flag of Brigade
2506 is that
it was returned by President Kennedy several months ago by
donating it
to the Cuban Officers at Fort Benning, Georgia, for the
Officers Club.
Investigation disclosed that the dissident Brigade 2506
member planning
to demand the return of the flag was Carlos Miranda (LNU),
commonly
known as "El Soldado Miranda" (Soldier Miranda).
Miranda
allegedly was being directed by Dr. Felipe Rivero, 1602
Micanopy
Avenue, Bay Heights, Miami, Florida and was receiving
instructions from
Dr. Rivero in learning, in English, the exact speech which
Miranda
should use in demanding the return of the flag.
Conferences were held with Juan Jose Peruyero Rodriguez,
President;
Andres Aurelio Bassols Pozo, Vice-Director of Organization;
and Rodolfo
Corondo Quintana, Director of Foreign Relations, officers of
Brigade
2506, relative to the purported intentions of Carlos Miranda
and they
advised that Miranda was not authorized to represent Brigade
2506 in
any capacity and that they would utilize the services of
approximately
900 members of the Brigade to locate Miranda and prevent him
from
representing himself as a spokesman for the Brigade.
Repeated efforts to contact Dr. Felipe Rivero for interview
were
unsuccessful. Continued efforts by sources of this
service, as
well as CAS and members of Brigade 2506 failed to disclose
the
whereabouts of Carlos Miranda, and it was later disclosed
that Miranda
had remained in hiding. Members of Brigade 2506 were
present
during the President's speech at Miami International
Airport, as well
as outside the Americana Hotel at Miami Beach, and Miranda
was not
known to have made an appearance during the President's
visit.
From a confidential source of this Service, a publisher of
anti-Castro
propaganda, it was learned that Diaz Lanz, a Cuban political
extremist
and former Brigade 2506 member, might attempt to approach
the President
Kennedy verbally at a Cuban rally in New York on November 3,
1963. The latter could not be verified.
Diaz Lanz was subsequently identified as Pedro Luis
Diaz-Lanz, born in
Cuba on November 8, 1926, a pilot, who currently resides at
120 SW 71
st. Ave., Miami, Fla. His Immigration Service number
is A 10 176
250.
Through Mr. Charles Yeager, Intelligence Officer,
Immigration and
Naturalization Service, Miami, Florida, arrangements were
made to have
Diaz-Lanz report for interview by that agency during the
time the
President was in Miami. Mr. Charles Yager subsequently
confirmed
that when Diaz-Lanz was requested to report to their office
for
interview on November 18, 1963, he informed them that he was
leaving
for New York City on the morning of November 18, 1963, the
same date of
the President's scheduled arrival at Miami, Florida.
On the evening of November 17, 1963, Dr. Emilio Nunez
Portuondo was a
guest speaker at a Cuban rally held in Bayfront Park, Miami,
Florida,
in honor of Jose Ignacio Rivero now an exile in Miami, and
the former
owner and publisher of Diario La Marina in Havana,
Cuba. The
above rally was attended by approximately 6,000 to 8,000
Cubans.
The above rally was covered by this Service in an effort to
determine
whether there would be any adverse reaction pursuant to the
pending
visit of the President on the following day.
During his speech, Dr. Portuondo bitterly attacked the
United States,
stating, among other comments, that the blood of the people
who have
been shot at the "wall" will remain forever as a black mark
for this
hemisphere and "that the cry of pain of all those who
suffered in Cuba
will be heard from the mountains of America to the Andes,
and will be
recorded in history as proof that once America was
cowardly". It
was observed that Pedro Luis Diaz-Lanz was seated among the
guest
speakers at the above rally. Diaz-Lanz was not
observed in any
areas the President visited on November 18, 1963.
From a confidential source of this office, information was
received
that Orlando Bosch, head of the Movimiento Insurecional de
Recuperacion
Revolucionaria (MRR), was planning to picket the President
by using
widows of Cuban fighters dressed in black. The above
information
was confirmed in a telephone call received from the Chief's
Office on
November 14, 1963, wherein was stated that "Orlando Bosch
Avila, Chief
of Movimiento Insurreccional de Recuperacion Revolucionaria,
is
planning to picket President Kennedy on 18th November.
Pickers
plan to use widows of Cuban resistance fighters dressed in
black and
carrying placards." (Message NBR 6225)
Orlando Bosch Avila, born in Cuba on August 18, 1926,
entered Miami,
Florida, on July 28, 1960, and is assigned Immigration
Service No. A 11
881 810. He is currently employed as a pediatrician
for the Dade
County Public Health Service, and resides at 2121 SW 11th
Street,
Miami, Florida.
Orlando Bosch Avila was personally interviewed at his
residence
relative to the information received and he denied the
allegations. Bosch was informed that he would be held
personally
responsible for any adverse incident which might result due
to their
planned demonstrations. He gave his assurance there
would be no
picketing or other demonstrations by his organization.
No
representation by the MIRR was observed during the
President's visit.
In the Miami Herald on November 14, 1963, a brief article
appeared
under the Latin Section indicating that a group of Cuban
refugees would
demonstrate at the American Hotel when the President arrived
to address
the Inter-American Press Association.
The information alleged in the newspaper article was traced
to Manuel
Artime's Revolutionary Recovery Movement (MRR), formerly
Civilian Head
of Brigade 2506. Personal interview of Sixto R. Mesa,
Financial
Secretary of MRR, failed to confirm the newspaper
article. Mr.
Mesa gave his assurance that no demonstrations or other
representation
had been authorized by his organization and none would
occur.
From an unidentified source information was received that
widows of
deceased Cubans, and wives of Cuban political prisoners,
would hold a
rally at Bayfront Park, Miami, Florida, during the
President's visit on
November 16, 1963, where one would be selected to sacrifice
herself by
burning in protest of President's policies toward Cuba.
The above information was subsequently confirmed through
information
received from 3-11-14, which indicated that a telephone
campaign was
being carried out by unknown persons who have requested that
Cuban
women proceed to the Miami Friendship Torch on the afternoon
of 18
November where certain Cuban widows plan to set themselves
afire in
protest to the inactivity of the Kennedy Administration in
the Cuban
case.
The persons planning the above demonstration remained
unidentified, and the alleged demonstration was not held .
From the Intelligence Unit of the Miami Police Department,
information
was received that Enrique Maca, Jr., as well as Roberto
Torres
Fernandez, Antonio Franco, Rene Gutierrez Quintanilla, and
Raul
Artiles, all dissident members of Brigade 2506, were
planning to
recruit Cubans to demonstrate during the President's
visit. The
above information was subsequently confirmed by 3-11-14, who
reported
that Enrique Llaca, Jr. is behind the move to harass the
President at
all possible points on his local itinerary by having Cubans
show up
dressed in mourning for the "broken promises of the Orange
Bowl."
Maca allegedly was engaged in a house to house campaign in
an effort to
recruit volunteer demonstrators.
Enrique Llaca, Jr. and Rene Gutierrez Quintanilla were
summoned into
the intelligence Unit of the Miami Police Department and
they were
admonished to refrain from any hostile demonstrations.
Official members of Brigade 2506 were re-interviewed
relative to
Enrique Llaca, Jr. and his dissident group and they advised
that Llaca
was not authorized to use the name of Brigade 2506 in any
manner, and
added that the Brigade members would utilize their own
resources to
admonish and prevent Llaca from adverse demonstrations
during the
President's visit. Llaca or any of his group were not
observed at
any of the sites the President visited during his stay in
Miami,
Florida.
A typewritten Postal Card, dated and postmarked at Miami
Beach,
Florida, November 16, 1963, addressed to the Chief of
Police, Miami,
Florida, was received by that department and subsequently
surrendered
to the Intelligence Unit of the Metropolitan Police
Department for
investigation. The post card reads: "The Cuban
Commandoes have
the BOMBS ready for killing JFK and Mayor KING HIGH either
at the
AIRPORT or at the Convention Hall. A Catholic PADRE is
going to
give instructions at the Cuban Womens Broadcast at 8:45
tonight by
"RELOJ RADIO" and then all are invited to dance at Bayfront
Park
Auditorium and take along a BOTTLE of wine, Wiskey, ETC., to
decide who
will throw the bombs. At King High because he did sign
the Ord.
About taxi drivers being only American Citizens and sending
refugees
away, ETC. Mary".
On November 19, 1963, the Criminal Intelligence Section,
Public Safety
Department, Miami, Florida, reported the studies of the
typewriting on
the card reveal that the typewriting was executed on a Royal
Typewriter, pica type, with serial numbers near the
4,000,000
series. On November 22, 1963, the same Department
reported that
the card was written on a Royal Typewriter manufactured
between 1:47
and 1:49. Nothing further has been developed leading
to the
identity of the person writing the card.
During the week prior to the President's scheduled visit to
Miami on
November 18, 1963, the Spanish language radio commentators
over Radios
________________ Miami, as well as the Spanish language
reporter over
Channel______Miami, began exhorting the Cuban people to
demonstrate
during the President's visit by carrying ___or by wearing
black dress
or armbands as a sign of mourning; others asked that an
attitude of
silence and mourning be adopted to show disgust for
unfulfilled
promises.
As reports of contemplated adverse demonstrations began to
increase,
received from sources of this Service, as well as the
Federal Bureau of
Investigation and the Central Intelligence Agency,
arrangements were
made for a conference with representatives of CAB and this
Service in
order to avail this office with the assets as their
disposal.
On November 15, 1963, a conference was held in this office
with
representatives of 3-11-14. They advised they would
utilize all
of their assets in the areas to be visited by the President,
as well as
for surveillance of Enrique Maca and his group and Pedro
Luis Diaz-Lanz.
The 3-11-14 representatives also advised that they would use
their
resources to reverse the trend to demonstrate as suggested
by the
Spanish language radio commentators.
On November 16, 1963, Mr. G. Harvey Summ, Acting Director
Office of the
Coordinator of Cuban Affairs, Miami, Florida, advised that
he had
contacted Arthur G. Gilbert, Federal Communications
Commission, Miami,
Florida and requested him to admonish the responsible
authorities of
Spanish language radio in Miami to restrict their Spanish
language
radio in Miami to restrict their Spanish language
commentators from
making irresponsible comments or suggestions to the Cuban
people during
their broadcasts. The above was subsequently
discussed
further with Mr. Gilbert by a representative of this
Service.
On November 17, 1963, 3-11-14 reported that responsible
Cuban exile
organizations in Miami have urged their compatriots to
refrain from
unruly demonstrations when President Kennedy arrived on
November
18. They further reported that Radio ____, Miami
called on
refugees to turn out to applaud the President, saying that
although
there have been differences in opinion, now is the time to
demonstrate
unity for democracy. Radio Station WFAB on a
commentary by Manolo
Del Canal, stated that he is opposed to hostile
demonstrations against
the President, and does not exhort the exile in that
direction.
3-11-14 further reported that the exile community is calm,
and massive demonstration was unlikely.
In reversing the trend to demonstrate, as previously
contemplated by
the exiled Cubans, the significance of the change is
attributed to the
efforts expounded by 3-11-14. It had been previously
estimated
that approximately 20,000 Cubans would make an appearance at
the Miami
International Airport at the President's arrival. An
unofficial
estimate of approximately 3,000 persons, including Cubans,
were present
at the President's arrival at Miami International Airport.
No hostile demonstrations by Cubans, either as individual
groups or
representatives of organizations, were held during the
President's
visit to Miami on November 1st, 1963.
Enclosed for PRS is photograph of Pedro Luis Diaz-Lanz, as
well as lists of hotel employees of the Americana Hotel.
APPROVED
Very truly yours,
John A. Marshall
Special Agent in Charge
Ernest I. Aragon
Special Agent
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