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awakening2lite
05-05-2008, 01:46 PM
http://i43.photobucket.com/albums/e386/cubanito06/l_1d8c664c7072d2f7af79ac2fb0ceb6b0.jpg

Elvis Manuel

Cuban reggaeton star missing at sea was lured to Florida by promise of money, friends say

April 16, 2008

HAVANA, Cuba - Cuban reggaeton artist Elvis Manuel and two associates were lured on an ill-fated voyage with the promise of big bucks, according to friends and relatives of the young star.

But the smuggling venture to deliver the 18-year-old singer, who is presumed missing at sea, and other Cuban migrants to the shores of South Florida capsized in rough seas just 50 miles from Key West, authorities said.

Alejandro "DJ Jerry" Rodriguez Lopez, a 19-year-old performer who was among the 14 people who survived the journey, said that he, Elvis Manuel and another friend were assured millions of dollars if they left Cuba immediately.

Rodriguez, and Elvis Manuel's mother, Irioska Maria Nodarse, identified the producers as Eric Reyes, 32, and Lester Delgado, 23, of Millenium Records Entertainment Corp. in Miami.

In a telephone interview late Tuesday, Delgado denied participating in or financing the smuggling operation. He said the allegations of Rodriguez and Irioska Nodarse were false.

"This is all being manipulated by the Cuban government," he said. "I can't say more but anything they say in Cuba you can't be sure is true. I know it because I lived there. I don't know what pressure they were put under. I was born in Cuba and I know what it means to not have freedom of expression."

Delgado said he had proof to contradict the allegations of Nodarse and Rodriguez.

"I'm not going to reveal them because I knew Elvis Manuel is still alive," he said. "Obviously we're the only ones who have shown face in this whole affair… No family members have stepped forth."

Reyes told the Associated Press that he signed a contract to promote Elvis Manuel in Latin America but also denied any involvement in the failed smuggling operation. He said he had hired a private plane to search for Elvis Manuel on Tuesday, more than a week after the young singer and four other migrants were lost at sea after their boat capsized in bad weather.

"These were all adults and they are responsible for their own choices," Reyes told the Associated Press. "We're serious music members of the music industry, not travel agents or traffickers."

The promoter said Elvis Manuel initiated contact with him by Internet and he signed the young artist three months ago. Millenium was to represent Elvis Manuel once he got to Mexico, where he was to tour, Reyes said.

Nodarse, Rodriguez and a dozen other migrants were rescued by the U.S. Coast Guard and returned to Cuba Saturday. Her son and four others who were on the boat are presumed missing at sea.

Rodriguez said he and his friends were intrigued by fame and fortune.

"We were told we would be millionaires in two months," Rodriguez said. "They said we would be signed for about $25,000 each on arrival. I thought I would send my father $20,000 so he could build a palace in Cuba. That kind of money lasts forever here."

Elvis Manuel's mother, who also survived the voyage, said her son and his friends were "brainwashed" by tales of success across the Florida Straits. Nodarse, who managed her son's career, decided to make the journey with him.

"They filled his head with lies and promises," she said.

In Miami, Elvis Manuel's aunt, Mirtha Maria Nodarse, said she met the two young producers for the first time after her nephew disappeared at sea last week.

"I can tell you they're doing all they can," she said in a telephone interview. "I don't know if they went to Cuba with promises of fame. I met them after this happened. I don't know who they are."

The Border Patrol Saturday took two suspected smugglers into custody in connection with the capsized vessel that carried Elvis Manuel, a supervisory border patrol agent, Lazaro Guzman, confirmed. Both men are Cuban nationals who had been paroled into the United States within the past year, and their parole status was being revoked, Guzman said. He had no information about the suspects' ages or identities.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials are now handling the investigation into the pair, Guzman said. He said the search for Manuel continues and that Border Patrol agents have stepped up efforts at local marinas to identify and apprehend smugglers, who now charge an average of $10,000 per person.

"They only think about these people as cargo," Guzman said. "Now we have a person missing at sea."

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials could not be reached, despite several attempts by telephone.

source: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/cuba/sfl-flrndcuba0416sbapr16,0,3746197.story


Listen to his music and view more images: http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=163791126

awakening2lite
05-05-2008, 01:48 PM
Coast Guard Searches For Elvis Manuel

POSTED: 7:30 pm EDT April 11, 2008
UPDATED: 8:13 pm EDT April 11, 2008

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. --
The U.S. Coast Guard is searching the Florida Straits for a reggaeton musician who left Cuba on Monday.

Elvis Manuel, a musician known for his anti-Castro views, left Pinar Del Rio, Cuba, on Monday with his mother and other Cubans, possibly in two boats.

The Coast Guard intercepted a vessel and found Manuel's mother aboard, but Manuel was not there. They believe the group might have left Cuba on two boats.

"This indicates that they were coming out on two vessels, which is a big concern," said Ramon Saul Sanchez of the Democracy Movement. "The other vessel might have, something might have happened to it."

Cuban-American fans held a vigil Thursday night on the MacArthur Causeway.

In a letter sent to Emilio Gonzalez, director of citizenship and immigration services, state Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart asked that Manuel not be repatriated if he is picked up by the Coast Guard due to a fear of political persecution.

"The Cuban government has indeed gone into a concert that Elvis Manuel was conducting and ended the concert with tear gas and other kind of proceedings, so obviously they've been repressed," Sanchez said.

Manuel could have a lucrative career if he makes it to the U.S. His MySpace page said several producers in the U.S. would like to work with him, NBC 6's Tom Llamas reported.

source: http://www.nbc6.net/news/15861345/detail.html

awakening2lite
05-05-2008, 03:19 PM
http://miamiherald.typepad.com/cuban_colada/images/2008/04/15/elvis_manuel_10.jpg

April 15, 2008

The recent incident involving Cuban reggaeton star Elvis Manuel (photo at left) has drawn attention once again to the Cuban migrant smuggling issue.

Elvis Manuel’s mother in Havana, Irioska Maria Nodarse, indicated in a telephone interview with The Miami Herald Sunday that her son’s voyage might have been a migrant smuggling operation.

Nodarse, 43, said she had more information but declined to provide details until she is certain about the fate of her 18-year-old son.

He is presumed missing at sea. His mother said their boat took on water and then overturned throwing all those aboard into the water. She lost sight of her son after a big shadow came between him and her.

Nodarse and Elvis Manuel left Cuba with 17 other people aboard the 25-foot boat that capsized in rough seas April 7. Nodarse and 13 others were rescued and held on a Coast Guard cutter until Saturday when she was repatriated to Cuba under the wet-foot/dry-foot policy that applies to undocumented Cuban migrants.

While Nodarse would not disclose how her son’s trip was arranged and how much it might have cost, U.S. investigators who track Cuban migrant smugglers say passengers are generally charged $7,000 to $10,000 each but do not generally pay unless they reach U.S. soil. If migrants are interdicted at sea, they generally don’t have to pay, according to investigators.

If the trip is successful, a boatload of 50 migrants – for example -- can mean up to half a million dollars for the smuggling ring.

In an interview in September, Andrew Corsini, acting deputy special agent in charge for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Miami, detailed how Cuban migrant smuggling rings generally operate.

I asked Corsini, who are the smugglers?

“They are mostly Cuban,’’ he replied. “They are here in South Florida. I wouldn’t say they are located in any one particular area. These people go to great lengths to avoid law-enforcement detection. They are very careless in their operation. There’s been serious injury and even death to migrants trying to get in here.’’

Then Corsini proceeded to outline, in general, how the smuggling groups find and transport migrants.

“There are several steps that we have seen,’’ he said. “There’s basically an organizer or organizers here in the United States and they reach out to the community by getting recruiters and those recruiters are responsible to try to find out who in Cuba wants to come to the United States.

“They find that out by going to the community and speaking to family members through personal acquaintances and they try to get a list of who wants to come here. The organizers will recruit special drivers, the crewmen, to operate the vessels from here to Cuba.

“These organizers take care of everything involved in the trip. They ensure the vessels have fuel, GPS, charts, locations for pickups.

“In Cuba there are basically three steps. The names will be brought down to Cuba and there’ll be one individual involved in the group down there, like a guide, and he will find those people on the list.

“A second individual will meet the people on a given date and guide them down to a barrier island off the Cuban coast

“And a third individual will be involved and he will actually go out on a small boat and meet the southbound vessel and guide that vessel in to pick up the individuals and guide it back out past the barrier island.’’

U.S. officials believe that Cuban migrant smuggling trips have increased.

The number of Cuban migrants leaving Cuba has increased as well.

They come by boat directly across the Florida Straits or across the Yucatan Channel to Cancun and then overland through Mexico to the Southwest border.

In fact, the number of Cuban migrants arriving via the Mexican border is now larger than the number of Cuban migrants showing up on boats in South Florida or the Florida Straits.

According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, at least 5,784 Cuban migrants have appeared at the border from Oct. 1 to Tuesday. At least 2,820 Cuban migrants have landed in South Florida or been interdicted in the Florida Straits since Oct. 1, according to the U.S. Coast Guard and the Border Patrol.

-- Alfonso Chardy

source: http://miamiherald.typepad.com/cuban_colada/2008/04/cuban-migrant-1.html

awakening2lite
05-05-2008, 03:46 PM
EXCERPT

Although the search for Elvis Manuel has been suspended, the Coast Guard has asked crews on cutters and aircraft that patrol the Florida Straits, the Gulf of Mexico and other waters to be on the lookout for him and any others.

”There’s the possibility they’re alive,” Warr said. “We don’t know where they are or where they could possibly drift to. It’s unfortunate they’ve taken their lives into their own hands.”

source: http://latinkulta.wordpress.com/2008/04/21/elvismanuel/
Apr 15th, 2008 - miamiherald.com