Source: Wire Pubdate: Sat, 27 Jun 1998 HARBURY LINKS ARMY OFFICERS TO BISHOP'S MURDER Guatemala City, June 27. In the midst of snail-paced investigations into the assassination of Monsignor Juan Jose Gerardi, U.S. lawyer Jennifer Harbury has dropped a bombshell that has the Guatemalan military scrambling for cover. In a press conference in Washington two day ago, Harbury -- widow of guerrilla leader Efrain Bamaca Velasquez who was allegedly captured and killed by the Guatemalan military in 1992 -- declared that she has information on who may have killed the elderly cleric. She accuses 23 military officers who she says make up the notorious death squad Jaguar Justiciero, or Jaguar of Justice. Harbury takes as a starting point for her charges a letter delivered recently to a mayoral candidate in Chimaltenango province. In it, the letter's authors threaten the candidate with death and also claim responsibility for Gerardi's murder. "JJ -- Jaguar Justiciero" appears at the bottom. "Given the Jaguars' desire to claim credit, I decided to give them full credit in person," Harbury explained in a message to her supporters. According to Harbury, the names of the officers she identified were provided by a witness who she said "was for many years in close contact with this death squad" and whose "information is first hand." Harbury refused to identify the informant, citing concern for his safety. "These military people... either murdered Bishop Gerardi or they know who did," she said in the conference. "And they have much to say about many many other victims as well." Guatemalans working on the Gerardi case seem to agree. Case prosecutor Otto Ardon said he would investigate each man on the list, and called on the army to provide their service records. "I don't rule out the possibility of contacting Harbury to ask for more information," he added. But the army denies the list of names has any validity, pointing to the death four years ago of one of the officers named as proof. "It's astonishing that these declarations stain the memory of Maj. Carlos Cardenas Sagastume, who died tragically June 16, 1994," a statement by the Army Department of Information (DIDE) reads. Nonetheless, army officials did provide minimal information on some of the other men, saying that three are with military intelligence, five are without assignment, and five are posted at different bases and institutions. Two captains could not be identified, DIDE stated. In response to Harbury's accusations, President Alvaro Arzu said only, "Unfortunately, that's the way democracy is. Anyone can say what they think, whether they're right or not." A number of the named officers are not new to the Guatemalan public. The news magazine Cronica reported two years ago that Col. Edgar Ricardo Bustamonte Figueroa and Lt. Col. Guillermo Oliva Carrera -- who is currently facing charges for the 1990 murder of anthropologist Myrna Mack - -- worked for G2 military intelligence under the last three governments, and that Bustamonte had headed the notorious Archives branch of the Presidential Military Guard (EMP) during the Ramiro de Leon administration. Human rights groups say that during the civil war the Archives was the nerve center of the state's repressive apparatus in the capital. In anonymous memos, the phantom group "For the Reclaiming of the Guatemalan Army" (PREGUA) has linked six others on the list to assassinations and other crimes. - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)