Montevideo place
also: Montevito, Montevago, Monteviego, Monteviedo
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Related entities (most co-mentioned)
Uruguaycountry · 14Tupamarosorganization · 7Alejandro Oteroperson · 5Brazilcountry · 4Raúl Sendicperson · 4Amorperson · 3Dan Mitrioneperson · 3Kidnapping and murder of Dan Mitterrandevent · 2Richmond, Indianaplace · 2Byron Engleperson · 2Dan Mitterrandperson · 2Ray Mitrioneperson · 2Ray Meteroneperson · 2William Cantrellperson · 1Department of Information and Intelligenceorganization · 1Havanaplace · 1Buenos Airesplace · 1FBIintelligence service · 1Dr. Clyde Fayerweatherperson · 1Dominican Republiccountry · 1Soviet Unioncountry · 1Dios Gomesperson · 1Billy Rialperson · 1Henrietta Lindperson · 1
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Mentions (25)
▶ 12:12
Byron Engel later tried to explain it all away by saying, quote, the three Brazilian reporters in Montevideo all denied filing that story. We found out later that it had been slipped into a paper by someone in the composing room. In other w…
▶ 14:16
And he only spoke out because it was a friend, not the general practice, just because it was a friend. William Cantrell was a CIA ops officer stationed in Montevito, ostensibly as a member of the Office of Public Safety team. In the mid-196…
▶ 20:28
like homeless people, known in Uruguay from the outskirts of Montevideo, as well as women apparently from the frontier with Brazil. There was no interrogation, only a demonstration of the effects of different voltage and different parts of …
▶ 23:28
So this guy, who basically became a whistleblower, disappeared from Montevago and turned up later in Havana. Probably get to get the hell out of Dodge because he would have been a dead man walking down there. About half a year later, in 197…
▶ 32:01
that can be used to buy and torture people. Among the many things that he says happened was a Latin American student conference had been held in Montevideo and was undermined by promoting the falsehood that it was nothing more than a creatu…
▶ 5:56
Montevideo Police Department identification that identified Mitterrand as a member of the FBI National Academy. And Dan Mitterrand explains that that was given to him, although I don't know how that, unless Dan is told the police department…
▶ 13:58
Alejandro Otero. He was no longer the leading specialist in combating the Tupomaros, having been replaced months before when the CIA and U.S. police advisors had turned to harsher measures and sterner men. Author Amor, a Brazilian journalis…
▶ 15:30
The consul's wife had raised over a quarter of a million dollars, and he had been held for six months. He eventually was released February 21, 1971, but the kidnapping story began to slow down after Mitterrand's body was found. Amor asked o…
▶ 21:56
was taken aback by Amor's news story and the treatment of the entire affair within the journal in Brazil. Engel offered a tale of conspiracy to explain the situation. The three Brazilian reporters in Montevideo all denied filing that story.…
▶ 26:22
for saving somebody's life. Morris Zimmerman, an elderly U.S. businessman in Monteviego, was shocked by the news because the same Dr. Dubras had pulled him through on his own heart episode. You never could tell, Zimmerman and his wife agree…
▶ 39:06
The Tupomaros were even more interested in the whereabouts of Hector Perez, Hector Omodio Perez. Omodio was ranked high in the rebel movement, but when his prominence as a leader was challenged, he had seemed to act from spite, providing th…
▶ 39:36
Once from the Monteviego's prison, now he was captured again and shot through both cheeks. He lived, but his jaw was completely destroyed. In the spring of 1972, a young Uruguayan returned from studying in Buenos Aires and found life in Mon…
▶ 57:12
That's the movie that they showed at the International Police Academy to every single group. When Costa-Garros visited Montevideo in 1972, he sidestepped questions of local reporters about what kind of film he intended to make. Privately, t…
▶ 53:37
Sendak was one of the men marked for a good life. His family was a small landowner in the department of Flores, but Sendak was indifferent to his surrounding and chose to live in a poor section of Montevideo. A member of Uruguayan's sociali…
▶ 54:05
He went instead 450 miles north of Montevideo and volunteered to be a legal advisor for a new union for the cane cutters. Possibly, he expected that once the plight of the cutters had came to the attention of his fellow citizens, that the i…
▶ 55:25
A group of burglars had broke into the Swiss Club, a hunting lodge outside of Montevideo, and made off with some of the old, worthless weapons. Five men were involved, and one of them was syndic. Another was a medical doctor and a club memb…
▶ 1:01:29
and they create other ones that are fake. In addition, a special branch for police intelligence work, secretly underwritten by the CIA, had been set up in Monteviedo. Its chief was an ambitious young police commissioner by the name of Aleja…
▶ 1:03:56
They knew that the police officers were skimming money off of it, but they didn't care. The CIA officer increased the monthly payments until there could be no question they had their hooks into them. Otero had succumbed to these blackmail t…
▶ 20:48
He knew that Dan had been in Uruguay these past 13 months advising the country's police force. Now it appeared that a band of thugs in the capital city of Montevideo had kidnapped Dan that morning on his way to work. Ray began trading infor…
▶ 22:17
R-I-A-L. He was visiting his sister, Rial explained. She had married a teacher from Centerville down the road. She had heard that Ray's brother was working in Montevago and Rial wanted to leave his address. The next time Ray wrote, he shoul…
▶ 45:27
He was quoted as saying he would never negotiate with the criminals. Yet there were hopeful signs. Representatives of the Vatican in Uruguay was trying to start negotiations to free Dan. Ray also received a call from a man who identified hi…
▶ 54:47
and he went to the newsroom to inspect a fax that had come over the wire. It was a note from Dan to his wife, Hank. Ray looked it over and verified that the handwriting was, in fact, Dan's. The note had been found after a tupperero called a…
▶ 57:40
At about 4.30 a.m. Monday, Ray's telephone rang in his apartment. It was a UPI reporter from Indianapolis. He had spoken with Ray on Sunday, and Ray had asked him to call back the minute they got any news. The reporter said, we just heard t…
▶ 9:00
in the CIA. His successes had included bugging diplomat houses, subverting and bribing local officials, and disseminating lies, i.e. propaganda, through the Ecuadorian press. He had been rewarded with a transfer to Montevideo, which is Urug…
▶ 1:03:09
Oh, my God. Always wake up. Always. Yeah. So he tried to get in the Navy during World War II, but wasn't allowed. So he joined the diplomatic service of the Department of State in 1942 and went to Montevideo in Uruguay. And what was he doin…