Rafters wash up on SoBe, then belly up to the bar
BY RICHARD BRAND
The Clevelander Hotel bar -- famous for hosting wild bachelor
parties and spring break wet T-shirt fiestas -- was the site of an unusual
gathering this
week: the landing of five Cuban migrants on neon-lit Ocean Drive.
After arriving on shore late Tuesday, the men walked across the sand and made the packed South Beach bar their first stop in South Florida.
''They asked the night manager for asylum,'' said Ryan Hammons, a supervisor.
Instead, they got beers, T-shirts and a round of applause.
''Half the bar, three-quarters of the bar got up to see the guys,'' said Luis Olivera, 30, a front desk clerk who was on duty that night.
Chad Landry, a 37-year-old salesman on a business trip from Central
Florida, said he paid for the beers and Clevelander T-shirts because he
was so
moved.
'I've always seen it on TV and I've always watched these guys
coming over. These guys swim or take a boat and they have the law that
if you make it to
land, you can stay. One of them said, `We just came from Cuba.'
And we were, like, 'Oh my God.' ''
Bartenders called Miami Beach police, who turned over the group
to the U.S. Border Patrol on Wednesday morning. ''They were wet, they were
shivering,''
Olivera said.
But by the time police took them into custody at 11 p.m. -- about
20 minutes after their arrival -- all in the group appeared healthy and
in good spirits, said
Bobby Hernandez, a police spokesman.
''They definitely didn't look like they were on the ocean for a significant amount of time. They looked fine,'' he said.
The five men have been identified as Jose Valdivia Quinones, 29; Andres Araluce, 41; Jorge Granado, 35; Berto Quinones, 28; and Miguel Angel Perez, 41.
''They claimed they came over on a raft and that they were picked
up offshore by a passerby boat and dropped off on 10th and the Beach,''
Hernandez
said.
He said the group was greeted by relatives at Miami Beach police headquarters and then taken into custody by Border Patrol at 9 a.m. Wednesday.
Under the United States' wet foot/dry foot policy, Cubans who land on U.S. soil are generally allowed to stay.
After being processed by Border Patrol officers at their Pembroke
Pines offices, the group was taken to Krome detention center in West Miami-Dade
County,
said Robert Montemayor, a Border Patrol spokesman.
Barbara Gonzalez, a spokeswoman for the federal Bureau of Immigration
and Customs Enforcement, could not predict how long the group would be
held
there.
''We don't speculate as to when they're going to be released
from our custody,'' she said. Montemayor said the Border Patrol was investigating
the
circumstances surrounding the group's arrival.