“We all make mistakes and this has been the biggest of my life.”
Those were the words that the Mexican scientist Héctor Alejandro Cabrera Fuentes pronounced this Tuesday before the judge who sentenced him to 4 years and one day in prison in a federal court in Florida, USA.
Cabrera Fuentes, 37, was arrested and accused in 2020 of carrying out espionage for Russia in a case that caused surprise in Mexico due to the brilliant career of this molecular biologist.
Dressed in prison uniform and carrying a yellow sheet of paper with his apology written on it, he asked Judge Donald M. Middlebrooks for “clemency” at a sentencing hearing that lasted about 10 minutes.
“I am deeply sorry and I apologize to the United States (….) This taught me that freedom is the most precious thing, but above all the family,” he said in English at the hearing that he already had an agreement between the federal prosecutors and the lawyers.
His family was not present, but a representative of the Mexican Consulate in Miami was.
Lawyer Ronald Gainor told BBC Mundo that, under the terms of the agreement, his client will spend a year in US federal custody and will then be deported to Mexico.
According to the judicial records of the Miami federal prison where he has been imprisoned, Cabrera has had “outstanding” behavior in his conduct and work.
But how is it that Cabrera Fuentes got involved with the Russian intelligence services to carry out espionage in the United States?
The mission for Moscow
Before being arrested, the name of Cabrera Fuentes used to appear in the headlines of the press for his developments in medicine and the recognition he had earned.
Born in the region of the Isthmus of Oaxaca, one of the poorest areas in Mexico, he did a doctorate in Molecular Microbiology at the University of Kazan (Russia), and in Molecular Cardiology at the University of Giessen (Germany).
Among the scientific works of the Mexican is the development of a treatment to regenerate burned skin and the development of a technique to prevent cell death after a cardiac event.
But then his life took an unexpected turn.
According to the accusation of the US Department of Justice, a Russian official – whose identity was not revealed – “recruited” the Mexican in 2019 in exchange for helping him so that his Russian partner could leave that country and return to Germany.
His mission was to locate a vehicle belonging to a Washington collaborator who was providing information on the Russian government.
According to the investigation, in February 2020 the Mexican traveled to Moscow where he received details and the “physical description of the vehicle from a US government source.” that he was to find in Miami.
“He told Cabrera Fuentes to locate the car, obtain the source’s license plate number and note the physical location of the vehicle,” the investigation reads.
But he had been advised not to take photos of the vehicle.
photos on whatsapp
Cabrera Fuentes had a Mexican partner with whom he traveled to Miami from Mexico City in February 2020.
They rented a car to follow their target and upon entering the property where he lived, “he caught the attention of a security guard” for having entered the condominium following another vehicle.
As the guard approached the vehicle to find out what was going on, his partner approached the US government source’s car and “took a picture of the license plate,” according to the Justice Department.
“When security asked Cabrera Fuentes and his partner about the nature of their presence in the building, Cabrera Fuentes provided the name of a person they were supposedly visiting.”
While trying to leave the United States on February 16, 2020, the Mexican and his wife were intercepted at the Miami airport by federal agents.
On her partner’s cell phone “they found a close-up image of the US government source’s vehicle license plate in the ‘recently deleted’ folder on her phone.”
Cabrera Fuentes then “admitted to law enforcement that a Russian government official ordered him to carry out this operation.”
After his arrest, he told the police that he had another wife and daughters in Russia and that he agreed to collaborate with the Russian government in exchange for facilities to get them out of that country.
He was arrested and charged with collaborating with a foreign government without notifying US authorities. He pleaded guilty in early 2022.
Cabrera Fuentes faced a maximum sentence of 10 years, but the guilty plea and a plea deal with prosecutors reduced his sentence.
He told the court that he hopes to “continue the work in favor of the community.”
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BBC-NEWS-SRC: https://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias-internacional-61888529, IMPORTING DATE: 2022-06-21 17:50:05
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