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awakening2lite
05-07-2008, 01:11 PM
Colombia extradites paramilitary warlord to US

Wed May 7, 4:26 AM ET

http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20080507/capt.263af96525434f90a22f7a3a2dcab7dc.colombia_war lord_extradited_ny110.jpg?x=179&y=229&q=85&sig=CLN0MEsb43XXxrOXrylOFg--

BOGOTA, Colombia - Colombia extradited one of the country's most feared paramilitary warlords to the United States early Wednesday to face drug trafficking charges, the government said.

Carlos Mario Jimenez was flown to Washington, D.C., via Miami on a Drug Enforcement Administration plane, according to President Alvaro Uribe's office. The announcement came just hours after Colombia's top judicial panel overturned a Supreme Court decision that had temporarily blocked the extradition.

The Supreme Court had ruled last month that Jimenez should not leave the country until he has confessed to crimes he committed as the leader of illegal far-right militias and paid reparations to his victims.

On Tuesday, the judiciary's high council overturned that decision.

Last year, the Colombian government stripped Jimenez of benefits offered during peace negotiations — including protection from extradition — because it said he was continuing to traffic drugs and run paramilitary operations from prison.

Far-right paramilitaries are engaged in a peace process with the government that has seen more than 31,000 fighters lay down their weapons. Commanders must confess to crimes in exchange for reduced sentences.

The 42-year-old Jimenez, better known by his alias "Macaco," was among the least cooperative warlords, and in August became the first militia leader to lose his benefits under the peace deal.

He is now the first to be extradited to the United States.

In February, the Treasury Department named Jimenez as a specially designated narcotics trafficker, freezing any of his assets in the U.S. and forbidding any American citizen from doing business with him. Along with drug trafficking charges, the U.S. also accuses him of money laundering and financing terrorist groups.

Many victims of the private militias — which killed thousands and stole millions of acres of land — opposed Jimenez's extradition, arguing that his victims would never be compensated and that many of his partners in crime would escape prosecution.

Alirio Uribe, the lawyer representing the National Victims' Movement that had sought to halt the extradition, argued that Jimenez's absence would mean many victims' families would never find the bodies of disappeared loved ones.

But Judge Angelino Lizcano, speaking for the seven-judge panel Tuesday, said extradition does not mean the reparations cannot be obtained for Jimenez's victims. He said Colombian prosecutors can still travel to the United States and obtain that information from Jimenez there.

Before surrendering in December 2006, Jimenez was accused of ordering massacres and shipping tons of cocaine to the United States.

Prosecutors said Jimenez became involved in a new gang war in northern Colombia after surrendering under the peace deal.

Emerging drug barons are filling a void in the trafficking business created by the demobilization of about 50 paramilitary warlords.

Colombia's paramilitaries were organized and funded by wealthy landowners and drug traffickers in an effort to wrest control of the countryside from leftist insurgents.

source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080507/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/colombia_warlord_extradited



This could be a very interesting trial to follow in the coming months.

awakening2lite
05-08-2008, 12:08 PM
Wed May 7, 2008

http://i.l.cnn.net/cnn/2008/CRIME/05/07/colombia.extradition/art.colombian.ap.jpg

EXCERPT
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- A leading Colombian paramilitary leader pleaded not guilty to drug-trafficking charges Wednesday in a U.S. court after his extradition from Colombia.

Carlos Mario Jimenez Naranjo is accused of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and providing aid to a narcoterrorist organization. He was whisked from the Colombian capital Bogota to the United States early Wednesday to face the charges in a federal court in Washington.

Appearing in a short-sleeve cotton shirt and slacks, Jimenez -- widely known in Colombia as "Macaco" -- quietly listened to the charges and showed no emotion as his court-appointed attorney entered the not-guilty plea. U.S. Magistrate Judge Alan Kay ordered him held without bail pending a detention hearing Monday. An initial hearing before a trial judge has been set for May 23.

U.S. prosecutors say Jimenez was among the top leaders of the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, a right-wing paramilitary army that the United States has designated a terrorist organization. His arm of the movement, known as the Bloque Central Bolivar, included up to 7,000 fighters who battled leftist insurgents in Colombia's decades-old civil war, according to the Justice Department.

Jimenez surrendered to Colombian authorities in December 2006 to face charges he had shipped tons of cocaine to the United States. He was extradited soon after a judicial panel in Bogota overturned a court ruling that blocked his transfer over issues related to the compensation of his alleged victims.

The extradition caused controversy in Colombia, where critics said paramilitary leaders should be forced first to serve time in Colombia and make reparations to their victims and their families.

EXCERPT

"It's really a very hard blow for thousands of people in Colombia," said Ivan Cepeda. "This man is guilty of many forced disappearances, of having had important connections with political and economic sectors in many parts of the country. And now it is necessary to make extra effort to ensure that this justice and this truth can be obtained in other countries."

Several relatives said they were hoping that Jimenez might reveal information that would lead them to the bodies of their loved ones.

continued at source: http://www.cnn.com/2008/CRIME/05/07/colombia.extradition/

awakening2lite
05-09-2008, 12:24 PM
WASHINGTON – LAWFUEL - Legal Newswire - Carlos Mario Jimenez-Naranjo, a.k.a. Macaco, has been extradited from Colombia to the United States to face drug trafficking charges, Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher announced today. Jimenez-Naranjo faces drug-related charges in the District of Columbia and the Southern District of Florida. Jimenez-Naranjo made his initial appearance today in the District of Columbia before Judge Alan Kay.


Jimenez-Naranjo was indicted in the District of Columbia for conspiracy to manufacture and distribute five kilograms or more of cocaine, with intent to import cocaine into the United States, and with engaging in drug trafficking with the intent to provide something of pecuniary value to a terrorist organization (narco-terrorism). The indictment also includes a forfeiture allegation. If convicted, Jimenez-Naranjo faces a minimum prison sentence of 20 years and a maximum of life imprisonment. Pursuant to the extradition request, however, the United States has provided assurances to the government of Colombia that it will not seek a life sentence, but instead will ask for a prison term. The defendant is also charged in the Southern District of Florida in a 20 count indictment with conspiracy to import cocaine, money laundering offenses and conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine on board a vessel subject to United States jurisdiction. Jimenez-Naranjo will first face trial on the charges in the District of Columbia.

Before his arrest, Jimenez-Naranjo was allegedly one of the top leaders of the Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia (AUC), a Colombian right-wing paramilitary and drug-trafficking organization. The AUC is a U.S. Department of State-designated foreign terrorist organization. According to the indictment, Jimenez-Naranjo led the Bloque Central Bolivar, a group within the AUC, commanding an estimated 7,000 armed combatants. Jimenez-Naranjo controlled large areas where cocaine was produced, and his organization was responsible for exporting thousands of kilograms of cocaine from Colombia to Central America, Mexico and the United States. In August 2007, Jimenez-Naranjo was served with a provisional arrest warrant based on the indictment in the District of Columbia.

An indictment is a formal charging document notifying the defendant of his charges. All persons charged via an indictment are presumed innocent until proven guilty.

The charges in the District of Columbia will be prosecuted by attorneys assigned to the Criminal Division’s Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section (NDDS). The charges in the Southern District of Florida will be prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida. The investigation in this case was led by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration with investigatory assistance from FBI and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in the Southern District of Florida case. The extradition of Jimenez-Naranjo resulted from the cooperative efforts of the government of Colombia and the Criminal Division's NDDS and Office of International Affairs Sections.


A copy of this press release may be found on the website of the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida at www.usdoj.gov/usao/fls. Related court documents and information may be found on the website of the District Court for the Southern District of Florida at http://www.flsd.uscourts.gov/ or on http://pacer.flsd.uscourts.gov/.

Roamer
05-09-2008, 02:29 PM
Gosh, when I saw the title of your thread, I was afraid they sent him here just to get him out of their country. So glad I was wrong!

awakening2lite
05-10-2008, 10:14 PM
Gosh, when I saw the title of your thread, I was afraid they sent him here just to get him out of their country. So glad I was wrong!

I'll have to post updates in crimes in the news? He's here now, trial should be quick. This man is responsible for 100's of murders, 100's of disappearances, 100's of peoples land being taken from them and countless 10's of 1000's of life brought to ruin by the drugs he imported to America. Not to mention the terrorist acts he committed with his army of 7000 drug soldiers.

He won't be facing the death penalty in Florida or in Federal court due to the extradition agreement with Columbia.

I'm hoping the trial will be broadcast live.