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courant.com/news/custom/topnews/hcu-wellsfargo0415,0,6304474.story<br><br>
</font><h1><b>Courant.com<br><br>
<br>
</b></h1><h2><b>No Bail For Accused Wells Fargo
Robber</b></h2><font size=3>By EDMUND H. MAHONY<br><br>
Courant Staff Writer<br><br>
1:56 PM EDT, April 15, 2008<br><br>
<br>
A federal magistrate ruled Tuesday that Avelino Gonzalez Claudio, a
militant Puerto Rican nationalist charged in the 1983 robbery of a West
Hartford armored car depot, is a flight risk and should be imprisoned
without bail while awaiting trial.<br><br>
Gonzalez, 65, is one of 19 members of the militant pro-independence group
Los Macheteros indicted for planning and carrying out the $7 million
robbery on Sept. 12, 1983. At the time, it was the largest cash robbery
in U.S. history. Records seized in the case show that Los Macheteros
planned to use the money to finance a revolutionary war against the
United States.<br><br>
Gonzalez disappeared in 1985 after his indictment in the case but before
authorities could arrest him. He remained a fugitive until his capture by
the FBI on Feb. 7 in the Puerto Rican north coast town of Manati, where
he lived with his wife.<br><br>
Prosecutors said during Gonzalez's two-day detention hearing in U.S.
District Court that he lived in Puerto Rico under the name Jose Ortega
Morales.<br><br>
Other court records show that, during several of his years as a fugitive,
Gonzalez worked as an instructor at a private computer institute in
Puerto Rico. As part of his work, Gonzalez instructed federal court
employees in Puerto Rico on computer use, according to a friend and
fellow Machetero member.<br><br>
After his apprehension, Gonzalez was transferred to Connecticut to stand
trial on 15 charges associated with the robbery. He pleaded not guilty to
all charges on Feb. 15.<br><br>
U.S. Magistrate Judge Thomas Smith agreed with prosecution arguments
Tuesday and concluded that no bail terms could be created that would
guarantee Gonzalez's appearance at a trial. His lawyer, James Bergenn,
said earlier that Gonzalez's family members and a close friend had agreed
to post $500,000 in equity from their homes. In addition, Bergenn said
Gonzalez would agree to house arrest, electronic monitoring and daily
reporting to court supervisors.<br><br>
"These charges just by themselves are incredibly serious,"
Smith told Gonzalez. "They are aggravated bank robbery charges, the
largest bank robbery in U.S. history. Frankly, I'm not inclined to
release you. The fact that you managed to escape the charges for 23 years
does not give you a free pass."<br><br>
Gonzalez's wife wept at the decision and was comforted by his three sons,
all of whom had flown from Puerto Rico to Hartford for the
hearing.<br><br>
"We are sad he didn't get out," said one of the sons, Oscar
Gonzalez Pedrosa, a child pyschiatrist. "We thought the defense
lawyer made a very good case."<br><br>
Assistant U.S. Attorney Henry Kopel had argued for Gonzalez's detention
on two grounds -- flight risk and dangerousness. Kopel said the FBI had
tied Gonzalez to two Machetero Rocket attacks on federal buildings in
Puerto Rico and found bomb making and military manuals in his
home.<br><br>
Smith said their was enough evidence to detain Gonzalez as a flight risk.
He said he did not need to consider evidence that he might pose a threat
to the public if released.<br><br>
Los Macheteros is a clandestine group which has taken credit for several
robberies and violent attacks on U.S. targets in Puerto Rico. The Wells
Fargo robbery, in which more than $7 million was stolen, was the most
dramatic.<br><br>
The group, in which Gonzalez held a senior position, recruited a young
man from Hartford, Victor M. Gerena, to obtain a position with Wells
Fargo and act as an inside man. At the close of business on Sept. 12,
1983, Gerena -- at gun point -- disarmed two co-workers, tied them up,
and attempted to render them unconscious by injecting them with a
still-unknown substance.<br><br>
Gerena then stuffed a rented automobile with all the cash it could hold,
summoned at least one Machetero who was waiting outside the Wells Fargo
terminal and disappeared. Kopel said Tuesday Gerena is till believed to
be hiding in Cuba.<br><br>
According to FBI sources, Cuban intelligence officers provided training
and financial support to Los macheteros, which is Spanish for
machete-wielders or cane cutters. The former Cuban government of Fidel
Castro helped smuggle the Wells Fargo money into Mexico. Cuba is believed
to have kept about half the money.<br><br>
With Gonzalez's arrest, only one other Wells Fargo suspect remains at
large, his brother Norberto Gonzalez Claudio. Kopel said Norberto
Gonzalez is believed to be hiding in Puerto Rico. A third fugitive,
Machetero founder Filiberto Ojeda Rios, died in a shoot-out with FBI
agents in the remote, southwest corner of the island in September
2005.<br><br>
Copyright © 2008, <a href="http://www.courant.com/">The Hartford
Courant<br><br>
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