Nation: How It Was Done
New York Lawyer James Donovan, counsel for the Cuban Families Committee, was annoyed by the notion that Bobby Kennedy and the Justice Department were really responsible for arranging the ransom payments to Castro. "I have enormous respect for the Attorney General." said Donovan, "but it is absolutely and unqualifiedly so that the policy and negotiations were entrusted to me."
Donovan undeniably believed what he said. But he was about the last one who did. For by now a spate of stories was appearing, detailing Bobby's efforts.
All the Volunteers. Months ago, acting at Bobby's behest, Donovan negotiated the $53 million payoff to Castro. But before the exchange could be consummated, the October Cuba crisis erupted. Only after it had ebbed did Donovan make tentative inquiries about whether Castro was still interested. He was.
At that point. Attorney General Kennedy ordered a "staff study" to find out if the ransom could be raised from food and drug companies (a quick check had shown that voluntary contributions from citizens might bring nothing). Assured that the goods could be obtained, he set a Christmas deadline for the exchange.
Bobby assigned two top aides, Deputy Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach and Assistant Attorney General (for taxation) Louis F. Oberdorfer, to work full-time for three weeks on the project. Under them were some 25 other Government employees and a host of private citizens, mostly lawyers, who had volunteered their services.
Progress in winning pledges for ransom contributions was charted on a large wall graph in Oberdorfer's office. The American Red Cross agreed to act as middleman in the exchange. Justice Department officials approached the trade associations of drug, medical and food industries. Five officials of the American Pharmaceutical Association came to Washington, saw the Attorney General. Referring to the Bay of Pigs fiasco. Bobby said, "My brother made a mistake." and implied that the prisoner exchange would be one way of rectifying it.
The drug companies were not accustomed to being summoned to Washington for contributions. Their industry had only recently been berated for the high price of drugs by a Senate subcommittee headed by Tennessee Democrat Estes Kefauver. One major drug firm has a price-fixing case pending in the Justice Department; two others are under investigation by a federal grand jury in New York, one of which is also under investigation by the Federal Trade Commission.
The drug companies volunteered handsomely, and were assured by the Justice Department that their gifts would be considered charitable contributionsat their sales price, rather than at their production cost. Each firm was permitted to deduct such contributions up to 5% of its annual incomeand each received a speedy ruling from the Internal Revenue Service on whether it approved the specific deductions requested.
In record time, pledges for $23,000.000 in drugs and Pharmaceuticals, $14,000,000 in baby foods, $9,000,000 in powdered milk and $7,000,000 in surgical, dental and veterinary instruments were offered.
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