ACCESSION NUMBER:00000 FILE ID:95053108.LAR DATE:05/31/95 TITLE:U.S. SAYS JUSTICE HAS PREVAILED IN LETELIER MURDER CASE TEXT: TR95053108 (After court upholds prison terms) +eg (550) WASHINGTON -- The United States welcomed May 31 a Chilean court decision to uphold the convictions and sentences of the two Chilean Army officers who ordered the assassinations of opposition leader Orlando Letelier and his colleague Ronnie Moffitt in Washington in 1976. Acting State Department spokesman Christine Shelly told reporters that the Clinton administration "applauds the successful efforts of the Chilean government to investigate and prosecute the case. We are gratified that justice has prevailed." On May 30, the Chilean Supreme Court upheld a lower court's ruling sentencing retired Gen. Manuel Contreras Sepulveda, who headed the military's National Intelligence Agency, to seven years in prison, and his deputy, Brig. Gen. Pedro Espinoza Bravo, who is still in active service, to six years. Shelly said the important thing about this case for the United States is that the "process came out in the way that it should. We express our pleasure with the confirmation of those prison sentences ... in the end, justice is served." The United States, she said, is pleased that the process took place successfully through the Chilean court system. Shelly noted that the United States welcomed the verdicts when they were handed down in late 1993 and she praised the Chilean government's "steadfast commitment" to proceed with prosecution of the case. "We of course cooperated with the Chilean judicial system," Shelly said, "by providing the evidence that was used by the prosecution." She added that while it has been "a long time" since the murders took place, "the important thing for us is that the process came out in the way that we felt that it should." Shelly said "it's important to note that every person that was indicted by the United States in this terrorist case has now been prosecuted either in the United States or in Chile and so hopefully this will bring this very sad chapter to an end." The case had been closely watched by the United States, which sought to have the two officers stand trial for the crime. Both men had denied responsibility for the crime and appealed their convictions to the Supreme Court. The decision meant that for the first time in Chile senior army officers will go to prison for human rights abuses committed under the military dictatorship of Gen. Augusto Pinochet. Letelier was killed Sept. 21, 1976, three years after Pinochet overthrew the elected Marxist government of Salvador Allende. Letelier had been Allende's foreign minister and ambassador in Washington and took up exile here. His car was at Sheridan Circle, near the Chilean Embassy residence, when a bomb attached to the auto detonated. In its ruling, the Supreme Court said the two officers had orchestrated the car-bombing. Michael Townley, an American who worked for the Chilean secret police, and a former Chilean Army officer confessed their involvement and implicated the two officers. Two Cubans were also found guilty of involvement in the killings. The ruling was said to be a major victory in testing democratic freedoms in Chile, six years after Pinochet gave up power to an elected government. Pinochet continues to command Chile's army. NNNN