It was perhaps the biggest benefit of Saturday's Brothers to the Rescue
mission.
Four fliers in two twin-engine planes spent 4 1/2 hours searching the
rocks and waters between Marathon and 15 miles from the Cuban coast. They
racked up these results:
Earlier in the day, just before their 9 a.m. takeoff, Lares led the
group, standing in a circle, in their weekly prayer, ``Father, we are in
your hands. . . . ''
Then they were off, two tiny airplanes no bigger than an old Volkswagen
Bug with wings, bearing the airmen and three guests -- a Herald reporter
and Spanish television crew, who asked to tag along ahead of Wednesday's
third anniversary of the Brothers' deadly Feb. 24, 1996, mission. Cuban
fighter jets killed four Brothers members that day.
``Seagull Beta,'' piloted by Brothers vice president William Schuss,
64, went first. His aircraft hugged the sea at 500 feet, searching for
refugees, while Basulto, 58, and Lares, 32, soared higher -- so their
twin-engine Cessna could send and receive radio transmissions.
While Basulto juggled a ham radio and telephone, and issued reports to
his Coral Gables office, Lares piloted the aircraft and scanned the skies
and sea.
``These days, we look both ways -- up and down,'' he said, a grim
reference to the tragedy. ``Before, we just looked down.''
First cockpit-to-Cuba broadcast urges resistance unity
Copyright © 1999 The Miami
Herald