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Tag: Cuba boat shooting

  • ‘A massacre.’ Scenes from a Miami vigil for men killed, wounded off Cuba coast

    Roberto Azcorra Consuegra, initially misidentified by the Cuban government as one of the men detained following a shooting off the island’s coast with the country’s coast guard, was among a group of Cuban exiles that attended a vigil held at Versailles Cuban Cuisine Restaurant on Thursday, February 26, 2026.

    Roberto Azcorra Consuegra, initially misidentified by the Cuban government as one of the men detained following a shooting off the island’s coast with the country’s coast guard, was among a group of Cuban exiles that attended a vigil held at Versailles Cuban Cuisine Restaurant on Thursday, February 26, 2026.

    pportal@miamiherald.com

    A small crowd gathered outside Cuban restaurant Versailles Thursday night to pray for the men killed and injured during a shootout with the Cuban Coast Guard off the island’s coast.

    As patrons dined inside, a man wearing a Cuban flag paced along Southwest Eighth Street with an “assassins and terrorists” sign featuring photos of Raul Castro and Cuban leader Miguel Diaz-Canel. Agustin Acosta said he was there to pay “tribute” to the men killed and captured.

    “It was a crime, a massacre,” he told the Miami Herald in Spanish.

    A group of Cuban exiles including Agustin Acosta attended a vigil held at Versailles Cuban Cuisine Restaurant after four people were killed when gunfire erupted at sea between a Florida boat and the Cuban Coast Guard, on Thursday, February 26, 2026.
    A group of Cuban exiles including Agustin Acosta attended a vigil held at Versailles Cuban Cuisine Restaurant after four people were killed when gunfire erupted at sea between a Florida boat and the Cuban Coast Guard, on Thursday, February 26, 2026. Pedro Portal pportal@miamiherald.com

    The confrontation happened Wednesday one nautical mile northeast of the El Pino channel in Cayo Falcones, off the northern coast of the Villa Clara province in central Cuba, according to Cuban government officials.

    Havana says a group of 10 Cuban nationals came aboard a boat registered in Florida armed and planning a “terrorist infiltration.” The Trump administration is investigating the allegations, but has said little beyond acknowledging that two of the men shot in the confrontation were U.S. citizens.

    Roberto Azcorra Consuegra, who was initially on the Cuban government’s list of the people detained but was actually in Miami, came to show his support for the men in Cuba’s custody. Consuegra said he knew most of the men on the boat from gathering at places like Versailles.

    He said he hopes the U.S. government has a “strong reaction.”

    “This is the moment to give el punto final, ya,” he said.

    A group of Cuban exiles including Agustin Acosta (left) and Santiago Ferran, attended a vigil held at Versailles Cuban Cuisine Restaurant after four people were killed when gunfire erupted at sea between a Florida boat and the Cuban Coast Guard, on Thursday, February 26, 2026.
    A group of Cuban exiles including Agustin Acosta (left) and Santiago Ferran, attended a vigil held at Versailles Cuban Cuisine Restaurant after four people were killed when gunfire erupted at sea between a Florida boat and the Cuban Coast Guard, on Thursday, February 26, 2026. Pedro Portal pportal@miamiherald.com

    The modest Thursday night crowd brought signs and Cuban and U.S. flags. They chanted libertad, for a moment. They talked about decades of repression on the island. They had questions, and expectations of a full investigation by the U.S. government.

    “I have a lot of pain,” said Santiago Ferrer, who has lived in the United States for 25 years.

    Ferrer, who still has family in Cuba, said he’s only ever been able to kiss his grandchildren through the phone.

    He described Wednesday’s confrontation as history repeating itself with the Cuban regime. He said the government chooses to “assassinate los muchachos Cubanos.”

    “Once again Cuba cries,” he said, his eyes watering.

    A group of Cuban exiles including Ramón Saúl Sánchez, leader of the Democracia organization, attended a vigil held at Versailles Cuban Cuisine Restaurant after four people were killed when gunfire erupted at sea between a Florida boat and the Cuban Coast Guard, on Thursday, February 26, 2026.
    A group of Cuban exiles including Ramón Saúl Sánchez, leader of the Democracia organization, attended a vigil held at Versailles Cuban Cuisine Restaurant after four people were killed when gunfire erupted at sea between a Florida boat and the Cuban Coast Guard, on Thursday, February 26, 2026. Pedro Portal pportal@miamiherald.com

    Cuban exile Ramón Saúl Sánchez, president of Movimiento Democracia, was at Versailles “to mourn those killed and to pray for the end of violence in Cuba.”

    Sanchez, who has organized about 24 “flotillas” to honor Cuban victims and protest the government, said the group of men likely faced 90 miles of rough seas on their travel to the island and had to evade the U.S. vessels before ultimately finding themselves face to face with the Cuban coast guard.

    Michelle Marchante

    Miami Herald

    Michelle Marchante covers the pulse of healthcare in South Florida and also the City of Coral Gables. Before that, she covered the COVID-19 pandemic, hurricanes, crime, education, entertainment and other topics in South Florida for the Herald as a breaking news reporter. She recently won first place in the health reporting category in the 2025 Sunshine State Awards for her coverage of Steward Health’s bankruptcy. An investigative series about the abrupt closure of a Miami heart transplant program led Michelle and her colleagues to be recognized as finalists in two 2024 Florida Sunshine State Award categories. She also won second place in the 73rd annual Green Eyeshade Awards for her consumer-focused healthcare stories and was part of the team of reporters who won a 2022 Pulitzer Prize for the Miami Herald’s breaking news coverage of the Surfside building collapse. Michelle graduated with honors from Florida International University and was a 2025 National Press Foundation Covering Workplace Mental Health fellow and a 2020-2021 Poynter-Koch Media & Journalism fellow. 
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    Michelle Marchante

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  • US citizens among the dead, wounded in Cuba boat shooting, State Department says

    US Secretary of State Marco Rubio attends a meeting with Caribbean Community (CARICOM) leaders, in Basseterre, Saint Kitts and Nevis, February 25, 2026. Rubio is meeting with Caribbean leaders seeking a common line on Venezuela and pressure on Cuba. He's also addressing President Donald Trump's priorities, including combating illegal immigration, drug trafficking and regional security. (Photo by Jonathan Ernst / POOL / AFP via Getty Images)

    US Secretary of State Marco Rubio attends a meeting with Caribbean Community (CARICOM) leaders, in Basseterre, Saint Kitts and Nevis, February 25, 2026. Rubio is meeting with Caribbean leaders seeking a common line on Venezuela and pressure on Cuba. He’s also addressing President Donald Trump’s priorities, including combating illegal immigration, drug trafficking and regional security. (Photo by Jonathan Ernst / POOL / AFP via Getty Images)

    POOL/AFP via Getty Images

    At least one of the four people the Cuban government said it killed in an open-water shootout Wednesday is an American citizen, the U.S. State Department confirmed Thursday evening.

    Another citizen was injured, a third person involved in the incident was on a visa for fiancés of U.S. citizens and “others may be legal permanent residents,” a spokesperson told the Miami Herald.

    The news comes more than a day after the Cuban government said it had killed four people and detained six on a Florida-registered boat after a shootout.

    The killing of an American could raise the stakes of an incident that occurred on the backdrop of an escalating humanitarian crisis in Cuba after the U.S. cut off its supply of oil from Venezuela. Rubio’s team has also been having secret talks with Raul Castro’s grandson — including in Saint Kitts and Nevis on the day of the alleged shoot out.

    “If in reality the Cuban regime shot at these American residents or U.S. citizens without any type of legal justification, the Cuban regime is in an even more dire, complicated situation than it is right now,” Republican Miami Congresswoman María Elvira Salazar told the Miami Herald Thursday. “The Trump administration is not going to allow this to go unpunished if the Cuban regime did what they usually do, which is shoot first, ask questions later.”

    President Donald Trump, however, stayed silent on the matter throughout the day Thursday and the State Department revealed little in the 24 hours after the Cuban government’s announcement — leaving the Cuban government’s narrative as the only public information about the shoot-out, even as U.S. officials say they’re notoriously unreliable.

    “How does the president not comment on an international incident like that that happened in the waters between Cuba and the U.S., especially given that there are ongoing negotiations?” Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Broward County Democrat, said in an interview. “I don’t understand why they’re leaving the regime’s side of the story in the public sphere.”

    In the absence of information about the shootout from U.S. officials, the Cuban Ministry of the Interior issued detailed statements Wednesday and Thursday alleging those aboard “intended to carry out an infiltration for terrorist purposes,” and said they seized including assault rifles, handguns, homemade explosives and body armor from the boat.

    The revelations that at least one of those killed was an American is one of the few pieces of information the State Department has publicly revealed since Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters Wednesday evening, “We will know quickly many more facts about this incident than we know right now.”

    The Cuban government identified Michel Ortega Casanova as one of the people killed on Wednesday. His brother told the Associated Press that Casanova was a citizen who had lived in the U.S. for more than two decades.

    This story was originally published February 26, 2026 at 5:18 PM.

    Claire Heddles

    Miami Herald

    Claire Heddles is the Miami Herald’s senior political correspondent. She previously covered national politics and Congress from Washington, D.C at NOTUS. She’s also worked as a public radio reporter covering local government and education in East Tennessee and Jacksonville, Florida. 

    Claire Heddles

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