Posted on 02/04/2004 10:21:55 AM PST by PaulaB
MIAMI (AP) - Two Cubans who tried to sail to Florida in a truck converted to a pontoon boat last year are making another attempt, this time piloting a seagoing 1950s-era Buick with nine other people, including five children, relatives said.
Marciel Basanta Lopez and Luis Gras Rodriguez, who were sent back to Cuba in July after they failed to reach Florida in a converted 1951 Chevy pickup, were allegedly at the helm of the newest vehicle-boat conversion.
The Coast Guard refused on Wednesday to confirm the status of the tailfinned car or the origin of photos of it in the water that were broadcast on television Tuesday. U.S. policy prevents the disclosure of information on such cases until they are resolved, such as by sending the participants back to their home countries, Petty Officer Sandra Bartlett said.
Under U.S. immigration policy, Cubans who reach U.S. shores are allowed to stay while those caught at sea are usually returned.
(AP) Luis Gras Rodriguez, rihgt, and his wife Isora Hernandez, left, and their son Angel are seen... Full Image
The Miami Herald said the 1959 Buick was nearly halfway to Key West by Tuesday evening. Key West is 90 miles from Havana, but it was not immediately clear where on Cuba the group had set out to sea.
Relatives in Cuba told Basanta's cousin, Kiriat Lopez, who lives in Lake Worth, that they knew the men were planning a second escape attempt.
"My cousin isn't crazy. He wants to be free," Lopez told the newspaper. "That's how crazy he is."
He said the group left Cuba on Monday night. "They've been waiting the past two weeks for good weather," he said.
In the Havana neighborhood of San Miguel de Padron, Gras' sister said she was awaiting news.
"They are very brave," Valentina Gras told the Herald. "When you are so sure of what you have to do you cannot be afraid."
Last summer, the two men were joined by seven other men, two women and one small child.
The Chevy pickup they used then was kept afloat by empty 55-gallon drums attached to the bottom as pontoons. A propeller attached to the drive shaft pushed it along at about 8 mph.
After the Coast Guard intercepted them about 40 miles off Key West, the pickup was sunk to keep it from becoming a hazard to other vessels.
Why not use them as boats? I doubt there are still parts available to use them as cars?
That's a good idea..........after closer examination of the picture, it seems that barrels were once again involved, but I still don't see how barrels alone could do the job. There must be some other influence......
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LOL... that one was really good!
The way I see it, haven't we granted asylum to people from communist countries in the past? Anybody who values freedom as much as these people would probably contribute a lot more to our nation than somebody sneaking out of one free country into another.
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