U.S. man gets 15 years for 1968 hijacking to Cuba

NEW YORK, (Reuters) – The last suspect in a 1968  hijacking of a Pan American airliner to Cuba was sentenced to  15 years in prison today after apologizing in a U.S. court  for his “desperate actions.”
Luis Armando Pena-Soltren, 69, a U.S. citizen, turned  himself in to authorities in October 2009 after spending more  than four decades in Cuba as a fugitive.

Court sketch of former fugitive Luis Pena Soltren. (New York Daily News)
Court sketch of former fugitive Luis Pena Soltren. (New York Daily News)

“This is the story of a man who 42 years ago made a  terrible mistake,” his lawyer James Neuman told the Manhattan  federal court.
Pena-Soltren’s motive, he said, was to see his sick father  in Cuba, which has been under a U.S. embargo since just after  the 1959 revolution on the Caribbean island.
Pena-Soltren admitted to the hijacking last March, pleading  guilty to charges of conspiracy to commit air piracy,  interference with a flight crew and kidnapping.
None of the 83 passengers and crew was harmed.
Pena-Soltren’s two cohorts were tried years ago and then  released after serving their prison sentences.
“I want to apologize to all those people who felt  threatened during my desperate actions,” he told the court.
On Nov. 11, 1968, the three men boarded Pan Am flight 281  to Puerto Rico from New York, U.S. prosecutors said.
About 90 minutes into the journey, Pena-Soltren held a  knife to a flight attendant’s throat and a gun to her back. He  marched her to the cockpit, where the men ordered the pilots to  change course.
In the 1960s and early 1970s, dozens of planes were  hijacked from the United States to Cuba as Cold War tensions  with the island’s leader Fidel Castro intensified.
Some people hijacked the planes to make political  statements, while others sought asylum in Cuba or ransom  payments from the U.S. government.