News (Media Awareness Project) - Colombia: Drug Lord Is Released From Prison |
Title: | Colombia: Drug Lord Is Released From Prison |
Published On: | 2002-11-08 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-29 10:23:38 |
DRUG LORD IS RELEASED FROM PRISON
Despite Government's Protest, Colombian Judge Frees A Brother Who Led The
Cali Cartel.
TUNJA, Colombia -- A former drug kingpin was freed late Thursday night
after serving only half his sentence, despite a U.S. effort to find
evidence to support further charges -- and possibly his extradition to the
United States.
Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela, who with his brother Miguel once controlled
the Cali drug cartel, an empire that moved multi-ton shipments of cocaine
across the globe, walked out of prison shortly after 10 p.m.
Rodriguez Orejuela, who was arrested in 1995 and sentenced to prison until
2010, was ordered released by Judge Pedro Suarez last week for good
behavior and participation in a prison work-study program. As the
government investigated Suarez to see if the convicted drug trafficker
might have bribed him -- Suarez has denied it -- another judge upheld the
decision Thursday.
Tensions mounted throughout the day. Dozens of police and soldiers
surrounded the prison where Rodriguez Orejuela was held, outside Tunja
about 60 miles northeast of Bogota, to prevent any violence.
With the clock ticking, U.S. officials tried in vain to stop his release,
providing documents that sought to block it.
Details on what information was being provided were not immediately
available, but U.S. drug agents have been trying to link the Rodriguez
Orejuela brothers to international crimes committed after 1997, when
Colombia's constitution was revised to allow the extradition of its citizens.
Suarez's decision last week that the brothers should be freed shocked the
nation and prompted the president to intervene. But Judge Luz Amanda
Moncada ruled Thursday that Suarez's order on Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela
should stand. She also ordered a probe of the government for allegedly
interfering in the judicial process.
Interior and Justice Minister Fernando Londono called the ruling a
"terrible blow."
U.S. officials in Bogota criticized the rulings.
Despite Government's Protest, Colombian Judge Frees A Brother Who Led The
Cali Cartel.
TUNJA, Colombia -- A former drug kingpin was freed late Thursday night
after serving only half his sentence, despite a U.S. effort to find
evidence to support further charges -- and possibly his extradition to the
United States.
Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela, who with his brother Miguel once controlled
the Cali drug cartel, an empire that moved multi-ton shipments of cocaine
across the globe, walked out of prison shortly after 10 p.m.
Rodriguez Orejuela, who was arrested in 1995 and sentenced to prison until
2010, was ordered released by Judge Pedro Suarez last week for good
behavior and participation in a prison work-study program. As the
government investigated Suarez to see if the convicted drug trafficker
might have bribed him -- Suarez has denied it -- another judge upheld the
decision Thursday.
Tensions mounted throughout the day. Dozens of police and soldiers
surrounded the prison where Rodriguez Orejuela was held, outside Tunja
about 60 miles northeast of Bogota, to prevent any violence.
With the clock ticking, U.S. officials tried in vain to stop his release,
providing documents that sought to block it.
Details on what information was being provided were not immediately
available, but U.S. drug agents have been trying to link the Rodriguez
Orejuela brothers to international crimes committed after 1997, when
Colombia's constitution was revised to allow the extradition of its citizens.
Suarez's decision last week that the brothers should be freed shocked the
nation and prompted the president to intervene. But Judge Luz Amanda
Moncada ruled Thursday that Suarez's order on Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela
should stand. She also ordered a probe of the government for allegedly
interfering in the judicial process.
Interior and Justice Minister Fernando Londono called the ruling a
"terrible blow."
U.S. officials in Bogota criticized the rulings.
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