News (Media Awareness Project) - Colombia: Colombia To Extradite Drug Trafficker |
Title: | Colombia: Colombia To Extradite Drug Trafficker |
Published On: | 2001-08-23 |
Source: | News & Observer (NC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-31 20:34:31 |
COLOMBIA TO EXTRADITE DRUG TRAFFICKER
BOGOTA, Colombia -- Colombia's Supreme Court on Wednesday approved a U.S.
request to extradite Fabio Ochoa, one of the highest-ranking former members
of the violent Medellin cocaine cartel.
The decision, pending its expected approval by President Andres Pastrana,
paves the way for the most prominent extradition of a Colombian drug
suspect since the 1980s.
Ochoa, once a close associate of the late Medellin cocaine boss Pablo
Escobar, was one of 31 people arrested in Colombia in an October 1999
crackdown on alleged members of a major new cocaine smuggling operation.
Should Pastrana sign the extradition papers, Ochoa would be flown to the
United States, where he faces a Florida indictment for his alleged role in
an international syndicate said to have been shipping 30 tons of cocaine a
month to the United States via Mexico.
The Supreme Court also approved extradition for two other drug suspects
captured in the crackdown, known as Operation Millennium: Jairo Mesa Sanin
and Mario Sanchez Cristancho.
Pastrana has 15 days to approve or reject the extradition. The suspects are
then entitled to a final appeal to the government that must be decided
within 10 additional days.
BOGOTA, Colombia -- Colombia's Supreme Court on Wednesday approved a U.S.
request to extradite Fabio Ochoa, one of the highest-ranking former members
of the violent Medellin cocaine cartel.
The decision, pending its expected approval by President Andres Pastrana,
paves the way for the most prominent extradition of a Colombian drug
suspect since the 1980s.
Ochoa, once a close associate of the late Medellin cocaine boss Pablo
Escobar, was one of 31 people arrested in Colombia in an October 1999
crackdown on alleged members of a major new cocaine smuggling operation.
Should Pastrana sign the extradition papers, Ochoa would be flown to the
United States, where he faces a Florida indictment for his alleged role in
an international syndicate said to have been shipping 30 tons of cocaine a
month to the United States via Mexico.
The Supreme Court also approved extradition for two other drug suspects
captured in the crackdown, known as Operation Millennium: Jairo Mesa Sanin
and Mario Sanchez Cristancho.
Pastrana has 15 days to approve or reject the extradition. The suspects are
then entitled to a final appeal to the government that must be decided
within 10 additional days.
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