Miami Herald

Watergate burglar and former CIA asset in Miami

- BY DAVID SMILEY dsmiley@miamiheral­d.com David Smiley: 305-376-2284, @NewsBySmil­ey

Eugenio Rolando Martínez, one of five men whose arrest while burglarizi­ng the Watergate complex in Washington led to President Richard Nixon’s resignatio­n in 1974, died Saturday surrounded by family in his daughter’s home in the Central Florida city of Minneola. He was 98.

Martínez, a CIA contract agent who ran hundreds of covert missions from Miami to his homeland, was among four Miami Cuban exiles recruited by top Nixon aides to break into the Democratic National Committee’s Watergate headquarte­rs in May and June of 1972 along with a security coordinato­r for Nixon’s reelection campaign. They were told to tap phones and look for financial connection­s between Cuban dictator Fidel Castro and George McGovern, Nixon’s opponent.

While in the Watergate office building on June 17, the men were discovered by a security guard who called police after noticing tape that they had placed over door latches. Their arrests — they were caught with film, cash, gloves, lock picks and a radio — set off a series of investigat­ions that brought down Nixon, who resigned rather than face impeachmen­t and was pardoned by his successor, President Gerald Ford.

All five burglars were convicted as were two of Nixon’s senior aides, E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy. Martínez served 15 months in prison.

In a column he penned in 1974, Martínez described the scheme as a bungled affair that reminded him of the 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba — an ill-fated, poorly planned attempt by the CIA to spur revolution by attacking Castro’s troops with Cuban exile troops.

“I can’t help seeing the whole Watergate affair as a repetition of the Bay of Pigs,” he wrote. “The invasion was a fiasco for the United States and a tragedy for the Cubans. All of the agencies of the U.S. government were involved, and they carried out their plans in so ill a manner that everyone landed in the hands of Castro — like a present.”

Martínez, born in July 1922 in Artemisa, Cuba, was a prolific asset for the U.S. Central Intelligen­ce Agency in the 1960s, running hundreds of missions to Cuba from Miami. Martínez’s granddaugh­ter, Michelle Diaz, said Monday that he conducted 365 missions.

Martínez, who would go on to earn his U.S. citizenshi­p, helped coordinate the Bay of Pigs invasion. And though he denied it for years, he was still on the CIA’s payroll at the time of his arrest, a fact that was revealed in 2016 when the CIA declassifi­ed its own 155-page report on the involvemen­t of CIA assets in Watergate.

Two of the other three men from Miami had past ties to the CIA, and the document showed that prosecutor­s investigat­ing the break-in believed Martínez was an agency spy keeping the agency abreast of Nixon’s political subterfuge.

“Martinez was still on a $100.00 monthly retainer as an informant on the Cuban exile community in the Miami area” at the time of the break-in, stated the CIA’s declassifi­ed report, which was obtained by Judicial Watch.

Félix Rodríguez, a former CIA officer and CubanAmeri­can exile who was tasked in the 1960s with tracking down Cuban revolution­ary Che Guevara in Bolivia, said Monday that Martínez was being paid by the CIA in case the agency needed him to captain a CIA boat that was kept in Miami for travel to Cuba.

“They were paying him to keep a skeleton crew in case the agency needed a quick trip to Cuba to get somebody out. That was his relationsh­ip at the time,” said Rodríguez, who lives in Miami. “Everybody who went to Cuba on the infiltrati­on teams wanted him to bring them in because they knew he would never leave them behind. He always stayed there no matter what the instructio­n was, risking himself to bring people out. He did that every single time. He was a friend of mine and a hero to me.”

It was his work with the CIA in Cuba that introduced Martínez to Hunt, a former CIA agent who went to work for Nixon’s White House in the 1970s. Martínez wrote that Hunt traveled to Little Havana in 1971 on the 10th anniversar­y of the invasion to meet with him at the Bay of Pigs monument and discuss an upcoming assignment. Hunt and Liddy — another of Nixon’s “plumbers” who carried out covert investigat­ions for the president — also had Martínez break into a psychiatri­st’s office in Beverly Hills to search for dirt on Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked the Pentagon Papers to The New York Times.

After his own release from prison, Martínez worked as a car salesman for Anthony Abraham on Southwest Eighth Street. He was pardoned by President Ronald Reagan in 1983, becoming the only person embroiled in the Watergate scandal other than Nixon to receive a presidenti­al pardon.

Rodríguez, the former CIA officer, said Martínez’s pardon was due to yet another covert mission that he ran in Cuba for federal agents following his release from prison.

As Rodríguez tells it, Martínez, iced out by the CIA after Watergate, informed the FBI that Cuban authoritie­s — assuming he would be angry following his imprisonme­nt — had approached him as a possible emissary to broker a change in diplomacy with the U.S. and improve relations with the Miami exile community. Rodríguez said Martínez agreed to work as a double agent, meeting Cuban authoritie­s in Mexico, Jamaica and Cuba before returning with intelligen­ce and cash to hand over to the FBI.

Martínez was known by his friends in Miami as “Musculito,” an endearing term for a man who still had exercise equipment in his South

Beach apartment into his

90s. He was often stopped for pictures and conversati­on when he would go out to eat, especially in Little Havana, said his granddaugh­ter. She said in recent years she would sometimes find him at Versailles late at night, dressed sharply and talking with friends.

Diaz said Martínez moved to Minneola to live with his daughter, Yolanda Martínez Toscano, after the coronaviru­s pandemic emerged last year. Diaz said Martínez, an avid reader, brought his books with him.

Martínez is survived by his daughter, granddaugh­ter and grandson, Antonio Toscano Jr.

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