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Carlos Costa was born on 1966, is a Downing of two unarmed aircraft in Cuba. Discover Carlos Costa's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 30 years old?

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Age 30 years old
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Born 1966
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Date of death February 24, 1996
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Carlos Costa Height, Weight & Measurements

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Carlos Costa Net Worth

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Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Timeline

1924

While the Brothers to the Rescue aircraft were still north of the 24th parallel, the Cuban Air Force ordered the scrambling of two military aircraft, a MiG-29 and a MiG-23, operating under ground control.

The pilots identified the target as a Cessna 337 and requested authorization from military control, who responded with "authorized to destroy."

Two of the group's three aircraft flying that day were shot down.

According to the OAS report, there was no warning of any kind issued to the planes, nor the opportunity given to land.

With the shooting down of each aircraft, the Cuban pilots could be heard celebrating over the radio.

Terms like "cojones" were repeatedly used by the Cuban fighter pilots.

Their radio transmissions included statements such as "We blew his balls off!"

In a reference to the Cuban pilot's understanding that the aircraft they were attacking were the same ones that had been repeatedly and continuously flying directly over the island of Cuba beside all the buildings and over the streets, they also transmitted the following, "He won't give us any more fucking trouble."

Finally, the Cuban pilots also said, "The other one is destroyed; the other one is destroyed. Homeland or death (patria o muerte), you bastards! The other one is also down."

Military control stated "Congratulations to the pair of you."

Subsequently, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights issued a report that concluded, "The fact that weapons of war and combat-trained pilots were used against unarmed civilians shows not only how disproportionate the use of force was, but also the intent to end the lives of those individuals. It is claimed the extracts from the radio communications between the MiG-29 pilots and the military control tower indicate that they acted from a superior position and showed malice and scorn toward the human dignity of the victims."

The third Brothers to the Rescue aircraft, with Basulto on board, was also identified for intercept and was to be shot down, but escaped.

Testimony from a USAF Colonel Buchner expressed support for Cuba's claim that both Brothers' aircraft and a third flown by Basulto were only 4 mi to 5 mi off the Cuban coast.

1980

A military version of the Cessna 337, the Cessna O-2 Skymaster, had been retired in the late 1980s from military service, although two examples were kept mainly in storage by the US Army at the Yuma Testing Ground until 2010.

Cuba claimed that the group used "planes previously employed in the wars in Vietnam and El Salvador given to them by the U.S. Air Force from which the "USAF" signs have not been completely erased."

The incident was investigated by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO).

1994

Their report concluded that the authorities in Cuba had notified the authorities in the United States of multiple violations of their airspace since May 1994.

1995

In at least one case (13 July 1995), the pilot had released leaflets over Havana.

The United States authorities had issued public statements advising of the potential consequences of unauthorized entry into Cuban airspace and had initiated legal actions against Basulto, but had retained his certification to fly during appeal.

After Basulto was warned by an FAA official about the possibility of being shot down, he replied, "You must understand I have a mission in life to perform", disregarding the potential danger involved.

He later said he considered the group's activities to be acts of civil disobedience against the regime, and a demonstration that such disobedience was possible.

1996

On 24 February 1996 a Cuban Air Force Mikoyan MiG-29UB shot down two unarmed Cessna 337 Skymaster aircraft operated by Brothers to the Rescue, an organization opposed to the Cuban government.

The Organisation of American States (OAS) reported that no warning was given; Cuban government sources said "These people knew what they were doing. They were warned", and that the aircraft had entered Cuban airspace.

All the occupants of the aircraft were killed: Carlos Costa, Armando Alejandre, Jr., Mario de la Peña, and Pablo Morales.

A third Cessna involved escaped.

Previous similar flights had released propaganda leaflets over Cuba.

Radar data and screen prints were provided by a United States Customs Service Supervisory Detection Systems Specialist who recorded the entire incident as it happened using data from a U.S. surveillance radar balloon in the Florida Keys.

On 24 February 1996, two of the Brothers to the Rescue Cessna 337 Skymasters (twin-engine civilian light aircraft) were shot down by a Cuban Air Force Mikoyan MiG-29UB, while a second jet fighter, a MiG-23, orbited nearby.

All the occupants of the aircraft were killed: Carlos Costa, Armando Alejandre, Jr., Mario de la Peña and Pablo Morales.

A third aircraft, flown by José Basulto, escaped.

The first aircraft was shot down 9 nmi outside Cuban territorial airspace, and the second was shot down 10 nmi outside.

According to Cuban authorities, two light aircraft entered Cuban territorial airspace on 9 and 13 January 1996, and released leaflets which fell on Cuban territory.

According to the pilot of one of the aircraft, half a million leaflets were released on 13 January; he also claims they were released outside the 12 mi Cuban territorial limit and the wind carried them to Havana.

This version of events was detailed by Juan Pablo Roque, the man who had returned to Cuba the day before the shootdown and who was later implicated as having helped organize the shootdown as a Cuban spy placed with the group.

According to Roque, Basulto had dropped the leaflets from 10 mi north of Havana, not the stated 12 mi, from a high altitude on a day when the winds would carry them south toward Cuba.

Specifically, in a Cuban television interview days after the shootdown took place, Roque, from within Cuba, stated, "I personally have violated air space, specifically the last was on 9 January 1996, where I got a call the day before to participate in a flight to Havana where thousands of leaflets were going to be released from a height of more than 9,500 ft at a distance of less than 10 mi from the coast."

Following that incident, the ICAO report states, the Commander of the Anti-Aircraft Defence of the Air Force of Cuba was instructed to intercept any further flights and was authorized to shoot them down, whether or not they had entered Cuban airspace.

On 24 February 1996, the group's aircraft flew another mission.

The statement by Buchner is directly contradictory to eyewitness testimony and verified radar data documentation provided by Department of the Treasury, Supervisory Detection Systems Specialist J. Houlihan during sworn testimony before an FAA Administrative Hearing in 1996, and the House of Representatives, Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, Committee on International Relations, Washington D.C. September 18, 1996.

The ICAO report found that the aircraft shot down were both very near (and, in one case, directly above) a U.S fishing vessel named Tri-Liner which had a recorded position at the time of the incident 9 nmi outside Cuban territorial airspace.