Cuban-born Venezuelan, Louis Posada Carriles, named in the 1976 airplane bombing of Cubana Flight 455 which killed 73 people, could soon be released from a New Mexico jail. Jerry Seper of the The Washington Times has the story:

Luis Posada Carriles, a Cuban exile named in the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner that killed 73 persons, could be released from a jail in New Mexico unless federal authorities appeal a pending $350,000 bond or move to place him in immigration detention.

Posada, 79, is a Cuban-born Venezuelan national, anti-Castro militant and former CIA operative wanted in Venezuela to face charges in the airline bombing. He is being held by U.S. authorities after being arrested in May 2005 on charges of illegally entering the United States. Posada is accused of lying on an official application about how he entered the country. 

Cubana Flight 455 was flying from Barbados via Trinidad to Cuba when two, timed bombs exploded in the aircraft killing everyone on board. At the time it was considered the deadliest terrorist attack in the West.  

Investigators from Cuba, Venezuela and the United States traced the planting of the bombs to two Venezuelan passengers, Freddy Lugo and Hernan Ricardo Lozano, who were employed by Posada at his private detective agency based in Venezuela. They later admitted the crime and were jailed in Venezuela.

Posada escaped from prison with Lugo in 1977 but they were apprehended in Chili, which extradited the men back to Venezuela. Eight years later, Posada escaped again, dressed as a priest.