Hector
Alejandro Cabrera Fuentes, a Mexican citizen residing in Singapore, was
arrested based on a Complaint charging him with acting within the United States
on behalf of a foreign government (Russia), without notifying the Attorney
General, and conspiracy to do the same.
John
C. Demers, Assistant Attorney General for National Security; Ariana Fajardo
Orshan, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida; George
Piro, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI),
Miami Field Office; and Diane J. Sabatino, Director of Field Operations, U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Miami Field Office, made the
announcement.
According
to court documents, a Russian government official recruited Fuentes in 2019 and
directed Fuentes to rent a specific property in Miami-Dade County, Florida. The
Russian official told Fuentes not to rent the apartment in Fuentes’s own name
and not to tell his family about their meetings. Fuentes traveled to
Russia and informed the Russian government official about the
arrangements. The official approved and told Fuentes to see him again on
his next trip to Russia.
In
February 2020, Fuentes traveled to Moscow again and met with the Russian
government official. At this meeting, the Russian government official provided
Fuentes with a physical description of a U.S. Government source’s vehicle and
told Fuentes to locate the car, obtain the source’s vehicle license plate
number, and note the physical location of the source’s vehicle. The Russian
official instructed Fuentes to meet the Russian official again in April or May
2020, to inform him of the results of the search for the source’s vehicle.
Furthermore,
according to court documents, Fuentes traveled to Miami on Feb. 13, 2020, from
Mexico City. The next day, on February 14, Fuentes’s rental car drew the
attention of a security guard where the U.S. government source resided because
it entered its premises by tailgating another vehicle to gain access.
When a security guard approached Fuentes’s rental car, Fuentes’s travel
companion, who resides and is legally married to Fuentes in Mexico, walked away
from Fuentes’s rental car to the U.S. Government source’s vehicle and took a
photograph of the source’s vehicle’s license plate. When security questioned Fuentes
and his travel companion on the nature of their business in the building,
Fuentes provided a name of an individual whom they were purportedly visiting.
Security did not recognize the person as living there and told Fuentes to leave
the premises.
On
the evening of February 16, 2020, Fuentes and his travel companion arrived at
Miami International Airport to leave to United States, on their way to Mexico
City. U.S. Customs and Border Protection inspected the phone of Fuentes’s
travel companion and found a close-up image of the license plate of the U.S.
Government source’s vehicle in the “recently deleted folder” of her phone. When
asked about the photo, Fuentes admitted tasking his travel companion to take
the photo of the vehicle’s license plate. CBP’s review of Fuentes’s phone
revealed a WhatsApp message from his travel companion sent to Fuentes with the
same photograph of the vehicle license plate. Fuentes admitted to law
enforcement officers that he was directed by a Russian government official to conduct
this operation. According to court documents, messages on Fuentes’s phone
showed that the Russian official initiated and directed the meetings.
A
pretrial detention hearing is set for 10:00 a.m. on Friday, February 21, 2020.
Fuentes’s arraignment is set for 10:00 a.m. on March 3, 2020. Both hearings
will occur in U.S. magistrate court in Miami, Florida.
Assistant
Attorney General Demers and U.S. Attorney Fajardo Orshan commended the
investigative efforts of the FBI and CBP.
This
case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Thakur of the
Southern District of Florida and Trial Attorneys Thea Kendler and Matthew
McKenzie of the National Security Division’s Counterintelligence and Export
Control Section.
A
criminal complaint is an accusation and defendant is presumed innocent unless
and until he is found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
No hay comentarios.:
Publicar un comentario