Venezuelan coup leaders flee to Miami
In the aftermath of Venezuela's failed coup, the United States faces further potential embarrassment after the
discovery that several alleged coup leaders fled to Miami. They include Isaac Perez Recao, 32, a reputed arms-dealer
and heir to a Venezuelan oil fortune.
With a group of armed bodyguards, Senor Perez Recao played a highly visible role in the April 12-13 coup, according
to reports in Caracas. As the coup unravelled, he is said to have jumped into a private helicopter and escaped to the
Caribbean island of Aruba. He and his brother and business partner, Vicente Perez Recao, were seen later in Miami,
where they own properties in Key Biscayne, a wealthy island suburb.
Under US law, the Secretary of State has the power to deny entry visas or revoke their issuance to persons deemed to
have "potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences for the United States".
This power has been used in recent cases against Haitian military officers and civilians alleged to have been
involved in plotting a coup. It was also applied to President Chavez after he led an unsuccessful coup attempt in
1992.
The Venezuelan Government has asked the US for clarification of its response to the failed coup, which Washington
appeared at first to welcome, but it has yet to make any official comment about the presence of the Perez Recao
family on US soil. Close advisers to President Chavez have called on the US to take swift action.
"They should be taking the same position with these people as they did with us," Lieutenant- Colonel Wilmer Castro, a
former air force officer who helped to restore Senor Chavez to power, said. US officials declined to discuss the
involvement of Senor Perez Recao, saying that they are still investigating what went on during the coup.
