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Cuban militant’s indictment tossed

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From the Associated Press

A federal judge Tuesday threw out an indictment accusing a Cuban militant of lying to immigration authorities, saying the government manipulated Luis Posada Carriles’ statement to investigators.

U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone said the interpretation of the April 2006 interview “is so inaccurate as to render it unreliable as evidence of defendant’s actual statement.”

Authorities said he confessed to sneaking across the Mexican border into Texas. Posada’s attorneys argued that the interview was just a way for the government to get more information about the investigation.

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“This is a victory for all freedom-loving Cubans in the world and a validation of the American legal system,” Arturo V. Hernandez, Posada’s attorney, said through his office in Miami.

The judge said Posada was entitled to certain rights under the U.S. Constitution.

“This court will not set aside such rights nor overlook government misconduct because defendant is a political hot potato,” she wrote. “This court’s concern is not politics; it is the preservation of criminal justice.”

Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd said prosecutors were reviewing the ruling.

Posada, 79, a former CIA operative and fierce opponent of Fidel Castro, was scheduled to stand trial next week in Texas on immigration fraud charges.

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He was released last month from jail, where he had been held since May 2005. An immigration judge has ruled that Posada could not be deported to Cuba, where he was born, or Venezuela, where he is a naturalized citizen, because he could be tortured.

Cuba and Venezuela want Posada extradited for his alleged role in the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner, but the U.S. has refused. Posada has denied involvement in the bombing.

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