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Rule by guerrillero: Petro's Colombia is reversing the logic of justice

Rule by guerrillero: Petro's Colombia is reversing the logic of justice

The Hilla day ago
Former Colombian president Álvaro Uribe was sentenced to twelve years of house arrest earlier this month for alleged bribery and procedural fraud — a sentence he denounced as a political sham.
It might just seem like a classic case of leaders weaponizing the judiciary against the political opposition. But it has an even darker twist to it, as the recent shooting death of the main opposition candidate for president, Miguel Uribe (no relation), demonstrates.
In a nation now governed by former communist guerrillas, those who once fought against a narco-insurgency are being confined, whereas the kingpins who trafficked the drugs and roiled the nation with violence are being ushered into palaces and introduced into the vocabulary of reform. The threat in Colombia no longer radiates from stateless cartels and guerrilla armies in the jungle, but from Colombia's very presidency.
For the U.S., partnership without strategic recalibration is no longer viable.
Under Petro, a former M-19 guerrillero, Colombia's Ministry of Justice is giving away the store to his leftist friends and allies who did so much damage during their decades-long insurgency. It has proposed revisions to the 2005 Justice and Peace Law that extend benefits to narco-commanders, urban mafia leaders, and recidivists.
Sentences for these would drop to a maximum of eight years, served not in maximum-security prisons but in 'agricultural colonies' — low-security compounds where their paramilitary command structures can persist. Confession and disarmament, once the moral core of these dangerous groups' demobilization, have been displaced by bureaucratic compliance — enrollment in 'territorial transformation' programs and good-conduct certificates. Under Petro, criminality is no longer being dismantled — it is instead being reclassified.
The policy's symbolism is as revealing as its clauses. Petro recently shared a state stage with leaders of Medellín's most violent armed groups — some of them escorted from prison, one even addressing the crowd.
Several had served five years, making them eligible for release under the proposed framework. To add insult to injury, the proposals would allow narcos who surrender assets to retain up to 12 percent of their ill-gotten gains. This will allow the nation's worst criminals to launder, legally, hundreds of billions of pesos into protected capital, labeled as reparation.
Petro got himself elected despite being chummy with these criminals. This year, he made an unannounced visit to Manta, Ecuador — a trafficking hub associated with Los Choneros. Journalists reported a clandestine meeting with that organization's fugitive drug lord. Petro declined to answer questions about it directly and never released his itinerary. Colombian authorities did not investigate.
To understand the pattern, one must trace M-19's relationship with drug trafficking. At first, they sought to selectively extort drug traffickers by kidnapping them. When the paramilitary group MAS formed in response to strike back violently, M-19 risked annihilation. So it adopted a strategy of leveraging the narco-economy instead.
By 1985, that posture had matured into an alignment. In a covert pact with Pablo Escobar, M-19 received $2 million to storm the Supreme Court and destroy extradition records. Escobar supplied explosives and the late drug lord Fidel Castaño supplied rifles. More than 100 people died, including half of the justices.
At that point, the boundaries between insurgency and narco-terrorism collapsed.
Their joint logistics reinforced the fusion. They relied on maritime shipments — as on the Karina, one of the rare ships intercepted and sunk, laden with East German rifles. In the 'Zar' case, a Cuban-linked flight carrying armaments was intercepted. These operations, tolerated by Cuba and Nicaragua, brought the Cold War together with the Drug War.
M-19 conducted fewer kidnappings than other leftist guerrilla groups like FARC and ELN — not from a sense of ethics, but because their cartel financing and smuggling routes made ransoms obsolete.
For decades, Colombia's laws set a logical order: Armed groups had to stop attacks, follow basic humanitarian rules, and commit to compensating victims before the government would formally negotiate with them. Petro reversed that sequence with a series of warrant-suspension orders — first for 19 leaders of a FARC splinter group in March 2023, and later for six Clan del Golfo negotiators in July 2024. Each order paused arrests and extraditions before either group had been granted political status, turning a legal threshold into a discretionary amnesty.
Colombia's intelligence service under Carlos Ramón González — now a fugitive believed to be hiding out in Nicaragua thanks to a corruption scandal — functioned less as a coordinator of intelligence and more as a tool of political control. Meanwhile, Petro shifted trillions of pesos to local committees operating in areas where criminal groups are entrenched — outside normal procurement rules. Sold as 'democratization,' this has outsourced authority to para-legal networks, diluting sovereignty where the state is already weakest.
For the U.S., the consequences have been immediate. Colombia sits at the center of U.S. counternarcotics policy. If the presidency facilitates trafficking under the false pretext of peace, then the DEA, Justice Department and Southern Command face compromise of their surveillance activity, exposure of their sources, and contamination of their evidence. Cooperation with Colombia today is a liability.
Washington has tools to deal with this. The Kingpin Act enables sanctions against those materially assisting traffickers; the alleged $100,000 'peace' entry to obstruct extradition meets that standard.
The Global Magnitsky Act covers corruption and obstruction of justice. It authorizes visa bans for officials and relatives on credible evidence, no conviction necessary. The Foreign Assistance Act allows the suspension of aid if a government facilitates trafficking or fails to act; that only requires political judgment, not a court ruling.
Petro has not passively tolerated convergence. He has orchestrated it, and people close to him are neck-deep in the corruption. In many regions, the state no longer suppresses but actually franchises armed governance.
There are precedents for dealing with such situations. The most dramatic case was the 1989 indictment and ouster of Panama's Manuel Noriega. In a less dramatic case, Tareck El Aissami, Venezuela's vice president, was sanctioned under narcotics authorities.
The test is no longer whether Washington can pressure cartels at the periphery, but whether it will use its legal arsenal when the center of impunity is the presidency of a partner state gone rogue.
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Man struck and killed on freeway after fleeing immigration agents, California official says
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By the end of his nine-year run as Michigan's football coach, Jim Harbaugh had transformed his alma mater into one of the top programs nationally, fulfilling the high expectations that greeted him when he was hired in December 2014. In each of Harbaugh's final three seasons, the Wolverines won the Big Ten and made the College Football Playoff. They ended an agonizingly long losing streak to rival Ohio State, beating the Buckeyes in each of Harbaugh's final three years in Ann Arbor. In what would be his final act as Michigan's coach, Harbaugh helped lead the Wolverines to the College Football Playoff national championship at the end of the 2023 season, giving Michigan its first national title since 1997. At a certain point, though, Harbaugh's Wolverines found themselves in the headlines just as much for their off-field transgressions as their on-field triumphs. REQUIRED READING: Did Jim Harbaugh know about Michigan sign stealing? NCAA: 'Incomplete' The final stretch of Harbaugh's Michigan tenure was mired in controversy, with the football program he had built into a behemoth at the center of multiple NCAA scandals. First, there was an NCAA investigation centered around impermissible contact Harbaugh had with recruits and players while access to them was limited during the COVID-19 pandemic. The NCAA found that Harbaugh "engaged in unethical conduct, failed to promote an atmosphere of compliance and violated head coach responsibility obligations' and it handed him a four-year show cause. What followed was even more seismic. In October 2023, news first broke that the Wolverines were being investigated for illegal in-person scouting of future opponents, a scheme centered around previously little-known Michigan staffer Connor Stalions. 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One day later, it is revealed that the probe is centered around Michigan off-field analyst Connor Stalions, who reportedly purchased tickets in his own name to games at 12 different Big Ten schools in order to have people film the signals used by coaches of upcoming Wolverines opponents. Oct. 26, 2023: Michigan confirms the FBI has joined the investigation into Weiss' unauthorized access into computer accounts. Oct. 31, 2023: Central Michigan announces it's investigating photographs of a man who resembles Stalions, wearing sunglasses and a Chippewas hat, standing on the team's sideline for its game earlier that season against Michigan State. Nov. 3, 2023: Stalions resigns from his position at Michigan, noting in a statement to The Athletic that he did 'not want to be a distraction.' Nov. 10, 2023: The Big Ten suspends Harbaugh for the final three games of the regular season, citing a violation of the league's sportsmanship policy. 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March 20, 2025: Weiss is indicted by the FBI on 14 counts of unauthorized access and 10 counts of aggravated identity theft. According to the indictment, Weiss hacked into university computer systems and accessed personal data of over 3,000 Michigan athletes, most of whom were women. The next day, Weiss is sued by two former Michigan athletes, who allege he accessed their private information for his personal use. At least 74 women have joined the lawsuit. May 5, 2025: As part of a self-imposed sanction, Michigan suspends Moore for two games for the upcoming football season – a Week 3 matchup against Central Michigan and a Week 4 game against Nebraska. June 27, 2025: Harbaugh and former Michigan president Santa Ono are among the 48 people from the university added to the lawsuit against Weiss. 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Peru's president affirms sovereignty of Amazon River island

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