The cable went further, detailing these allegations: o U.S. diplomats and their families ``are denied rest or relaxation by house alarms triggered in the middle of the night . . . phones that ring at all hours, and by cellphones that ring every half hour for no apparent reason.'' o Cars belonging to U.S. diplomats who talk regularly with Cuban dissidents on the island are particular targets, their tires slashed, windows smashed and insides ''pilfered.'' Sometimes, as evidence of an intrusion, they find their car radios re-tuned to pro-Castro stations. o The Cubans search and wiretap the Americans' Havana residences, including tapping into their home computers, leaving open doors and windows behind and 'leaving not-so-subtle `messages' . . . including unwelcome calling cards like urine and feces.''***
Friday's defectors, who are believed to have worked from a station in Bahia Honda on the island's northwest coast, told authorities the Cuban government obtained the boat in 1996. Federal investigators lined up Friday to interview the men and to confirm their identities. ''We do believe they are military people. We think they are Cuban border guards, and we think that they did plan this outing,'' said Keith A. Roberts, a U.S. Border Patrol spokesman. ``This is something I haven't seen in my 11 years being here. It truly is an anamoly.'' Roberts said border officials were keeping the imported weapons ``locked away very safely in our inventory.'' The arrivals, who wore Cuban Ministry of the Interior patches on their shirts, made it about two blocks from where they landed -- down a wooden dock, past the hotel pool, past an outdoor Jacuzzi -- before flagging down a Key West police officer. Soon after, one turned over a Chinese-made handgun.
'FRUSTRATED' MEN The men told a Spanish-speaking officer that they were frustrated with life on the island and decided to embark on the trip, which, with the boat's twin 200-horsepower engines, took three hours. ''They stated that they were basically tired of the impoverished conditions and frustrated with not being able to own their own homes and their own cars and that type of thing and that's why they left,'' said Tara Koenig, a Key West police officer. Then the men asked if they could call relatives in Miami. The men, who said they were with Cuba's Tropas Guardafronteras -- Border Guard Troops, identified themselves as Yoadris Rodríguez Camajo, Egar Raúl Batista Gamboa, Ofil Lara Corria and Rodisan Sugura López.***