CHILEAN BREAK-INS PUZZLE WATERGATE INVESTIGATORS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
01430357
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 28, 2022
Document Release Date: 
August 7, 2017
Sequence Number: 
Case Number: 
F-2007-00094
Publication Date: 
May 29, 1973
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PDF icon chilean break-ins puzzle [15132552].pdf266.51 KB
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_ -,,Approved for Release: 2017/01/18 C01430357. . , SENDER. WILL CHECK CL AS: CATION #14.W11; D4Ocrup m UNCLASSIFIED F-1� tX,NFIDENTIAkSECRET OFFICIAL ROUTINGT.SL' TO NAME AND ADDRESS 2 C. DATE 3 (?) ;:Al.:415LS cdtAi 4 5 � v�A-A__c � . (.? .14 AI, ACTION APPROVAL COMMENT DIRECT REPLY DISPATCH FILE FREPA.RE:JiEPLY ,itre,diNt4DATiom CONCURRENCE INFORMATION Malt SIGNATURE Remarks: FOLD HERE TO RETURN TO SENDER ' FROM: NAME, ADDRESS AND PHONE NO. s UNCLASSIFIED FORM NO. .137 I-67 4 Use previous editions CONFIDENTIAL', DATE SECRET (40) Approved for Release: 2017/01/18 C01430357 -Approved for Release: 2017/01/18 C014303570, FORM NO. 10 I REPLACES FORM 10-101 I AUG 54 WHICH MAY DE USED. Approved for Release: 2017/01/18 C01430357 (47) Approved for Release: 2017%01/18 C01430357. '..-.PPYOTUCTUZLES 29 .141r(1971' -'ChileanBreab insPuzzlP. t.- No evidence has. turned up ,.that -members of the team that erbroke intO the Watergate were ,Watergate Investigators.;a4fthoUgh hints that some of involved in the entries, � - '-ii.lient'Anay have participated ' 'have come from the authorities � By MICHAEL. C. JENSEN One unsolved puzale that: - Watergate investigators are The next break-in was said' to have .taken place- six. days studying is the identity of in-; later at the East 36th Street! -truders who _broke into thej apartment in Manhattan � of ..Ia-; offices and residences of vier Urrutia. president of the! � Chilean diplomats in Washing-; 1 Chilean Development Corpora-! ��e.,,ton and New York at least foura-taon and a clos.ea-economic ad-1 .times from April, 1971 to May, viser to Chile's president, Dra .1972. . . � Salvador Allende Gossens. Four break-ins against Chile- a.ns took place in the 14 months immediately preceding the break-in at the Democrats' Watergate headquarters last June. They also occurred at a time when the Chilean Govern- ment was -negotiating with the International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation overj compensation for Chile's take- over of the huge conglomerate'si -telephone subsidiary. Because of far more sensa- tional disclosures, Watergate in- vestigators have not actively purSited the Chilean case in recent weeks, beyond asking a auestion or two about the ..)reak-ins during . interrogations of the :Watergate burglars. . However. - Senate investigat- ors have informed both the Senate \trate:gate- -committee and the Watergate prosecutors in Washington about the details of the four break-ins Al the � offices and residences of the Chileans. �3 Occurred In New York- . Furthermore, a member of the -speeial intelligence unit of the New York Police Department was said to have concluded that the three break-ins that oa- curred in Manhattan were no routine burglaries. And .investi- gators in Washington said that the four break-ins had followed similar patterns. They were apparently done by professionala, �tita a few. items taken to make the break- ins appear to he burglaries, in- vestigators said. Other valuable items were left behind, how- ever, and sensitive papers were disturbed, possibly in the' course of being photographed. Investigators � "reconstruct the break-ins as follows: Thera first known break-in oc- curred'. on the afternoon of pill 5, 1971 at the Manhattan esidence on Lexington Ave- nue of Humberto Diaz-Casa- nueva, Chile's Ambassador to the United Nations. The Am- bassador- reportedly told the police that the 'intruders had stolen such iema as a hair-dryer and a nair of ho,-us an_ (Latina. Pistol Stolen � Mr. Urrutia told the police that a .25-caliber Bernardelli pistol had been stolen. How- ever, a fur. coat in a closet was reportedly untouched. Gova ernment papers were said to have been disturbed, and chew- ing gum was edged into the apartment's lock, a . familiar practice of professional intrud- ers that gives them time to escape if they are surprised during the course of an .entry. The third reported break4n took place on Feb. 10, 1972, investigators said, at the New York residence on East 46th Street of Victor Rioseccaefors merly a Chilean offiCialeatAlte United Nations, A radiri:and a television set were reportedly taken and papers disturbed. Tile fourth and most pub- licized break-in took place over the weekend of Ma 13, 1972; at the Chilean Embassy in Waahington. Files of :the Am- bassador and his -first secre- tary, Fernando Bachelet, were reportedly rifled and -.two ra- dios taken. Chilean officials have been ordered by their Government, not to discuss the matter, but snurces close to the case said! that. the former Chilean Am- bassador, Orlando letelier, had confirmed that the Washington intruders apparentlaewareaeek- ing sensitive Government docu- ments. Speculation by Investigators Capitol Hill investigators have speculated that the in- truders might have been seek- in; evidence of links between Cuba and Chile, or looking for politically sensitive documents relating to the take-over. by Chile of I.T.T. properties. in-Florida. _ -.-.First reports about a break- . at the Chilean Embassy be- .gan . to circulate in Miami a week or so after the Watergate break-in of June 17, 1972, and -there was speculation that the two might have been related. That link never has been red, and some investigators doubt that itsexists. One explanation offered for the Chilean break-in was that if any Cuban-Americans partici- pated, as was the case in the Watergate. they might have been looking for documents --that would indicate collusion between the Chilean and Castro governments. Shortly after the specula- tion began in Miami. Chileanl break-in and reported it to the; city- police, who started an astestigation that has been in- conclusive, ....Earlier this month. a Cuban: named Felipe de Diego was interrogated by State Attorney Richard E. Gerstein in Florida regarding- participation . in -the. break-in at the offices of Dr. Daniel Ellsherg's psychiatrist in Los Angeles. He and his attorney indicat- ed that, if. eranted immunity, Mr. de Diego might shed new light on other surreptitious op- eratiens in Washington. Inves- tigators in aliarui later indicat- ed that these operations might include the Chilean break-in or- break-ins, . officials acknowledged the 00322 Approved for Release: 2017/01/18 C01430357 jr.