
Colombian ex-President Álvaro Uribe sentenced to 12 years house arrest for bribery
The sentence, which Uribe said will be appealed, followed a nearly six-month trial in which prosecutors presented evidence that he attempted to influence witnesses who accused the law-and-order leader of having links to a paramilitary group in the 1990s.
"Politics prevailed over the law in sentencing," Uribe said after Friday's hearing.
Uribe, 73, has denied any wrongdoing. He faced up to 12 years in prison after being convicted Monday.
His attorney had asked the court to allow Uribe to remain free while he appeals the verdict. Judge Sandra Heredia on Friday said she did not grant the defense's request because it would be "easy" for the former president to leave the country to "evade the imposed sanction."
Heredia also banned Uribe from holding public office for eight years and fined him about $776,000.
Ahead of Friday's sentencing, Uribe posted on X that he was preparing arguments to support his appeal. He added that one must "think much more about the solution than the problem" during personal crises.
The appeals court will have until early October to issue a ruling, which either party could then challenge before Colombia's Supreme Court.
The former president governed from 2002 to 2010 with strong support from the United States. He is a polarizing figure in Colombia, where many credit him for saving the country from becoming a failed state, while others associate him with human rights violations and the rise of paramilitary groups in the 1990s.
Heredia on Monday said she had seen enough evidence to determine that Uribe conspired with a lawyer to coax three former paramilitary group members, who were in prison, into changing testimony they had provided to Ivan Cepeda, a leftist senator who had launched an investigation into Uribe's alleged ties to a paramilitary group.
Uribe in 2012 filed a libel suit against Cepeda in the Supreme Court. But in a twist, the high court in 2018 dismissed the accusations against Cepeda and began investigating Uribe.
Martha Peñuela Rosales, a supporter of Uribe's party in the capital, Bogota, said she wept and prayed after hearing of the sentence. "It's an unjust sentence. He deserves to be free," she said.
Meanwhile, Sergio Andrés Parra, who protested against Uribe outside the courthouse, said the 12-year sentence "is enough" and, even if the former president appeals, "history has already condemned him."
During Uribe's presidency, Colombia's military attained some of its biggest battlefield victories against Latin America's oldest leftist insurgency, pushing the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia into remote pockets and forcing the group's leadership into peace talks that led to the disarmament of more than 13,000 fighters in 2016.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Is the US headed toward a recession? Experts weigh in
A weak jobs report in recent days raised alarm among some analysts that the U.S. economy may be slipping toward a recession. Hiring slowed sharply over the summer, federal government data showed. The jobs report came days after fresh gross domestic product data indicated average annualized growth of 1.2% over the first half of 2025, well below 2.8% growth last year. Analysts who spoke to ABC News said the economy could dip into a downturn but the outlook remains uncertain. They differed sharply on the likelihood of a recession, ranging from dire warnings to skepticism about whether the recent data suggests significant cause for concern. "It's too early to see whether this is a trend," Harry Holzer, a professor of economics at Georgetown University and a fellow at the Brookings Institution, told ABC News. "The likelihood of a recession went up because of these job numbers, but it could be a one-time adjustment or a bump down that avoids negative growth." The economy added an average of about 35,000 jobs over three months ending in July, which marks a major slowdown from roughly 128,000 jobs added monthly over the prior three months, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data on Friday showed. Employers are hiring at their slowest pace since 2020. Hours after the release of the report on Friday, President Donald Trump fired BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer, an appointee of former President Joe Biden who was confirmed by a bipartisan vote in the Senate in 2024. In a social media post, Trump volleyed sharp criticism and baseless accusations at McEntarfer, claiming without evidence that the data had been "manipulated." The jobs report featured revisions of previous months' data, which is a routine practice. McEntarfer did not immediately reply to ABC News' request for comment. "It has been the honor of my life to serve as Commissioner of BLS alongside the many dedicated civil servants tasked with measuring a vast and dynamic economy," McEntarfer said in a social media post after her dismissal. "It is vital and important work and I thank them for their service to this nation." William Beach, a former commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, who was appointed by Trump, condemned the firing of McEntarfer. "The totally groundless firing of Dr. Erika McEntarfer, my successor as Commissioner of Labor Statistics at BLS, sets a dangerous precedent and undermines the statistical mission of the Bureau,' Beach posted on X. Trump, meanwhile, touted his economic performance in a social media post: "The Economy is BOOMING under 'TRUMP' despite a Fed that also plays games, this time with Interest Rates." Some analysts disagreed. The hiring cooldown hit a wide swath of industries, including manufacturing and the federal government. The overall unemployment rate of 4.2% continued to hover near a historically low level, but unemployment rose among Black workers, which can foretell job losses among other groups. "The risks are increasingly high that we're going into recession," Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, told ABC News. "We're not there yet – and maybe this thing gets turned around. But that's increasingly becoming hard to do with each passing week." Zandi largely faulted the rollout of Trump's tariffs for the apparent cooldown. In recent months, Trump has imposed a slew of far-reaching levies on dozens of countries and some specific products, such as steel, aluminum and cars. Tariffs place a tax burden on importers, raising their costs and risking elevated prices for consumers, Zandi said. "Tariffs weigh on economic growth," Zandi added. The Trump administration has touted tariffs as part of a wider set of "America First economic policies," which have "sparked trillions of dollars in new investment in U.S. manufacturing, technology, and infrastructure," according to the White House's website. The economy would likely need to slow further to be considered a recession. Many observers define a recession through the shorthand metric of two consecutive quarters of decline in a nation's inflation-adjusted gross domestic product. The National Bureau of Economic Research, or NBER, a research organization seen as an authority on measuring economic performance, uses a more complicated definition that takes into account several indicators that must convey "a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months," the group says. While acknowledging the tepid numbers, other analysts said warnings about a recession are premature. The economy has largely averted the type of widespread job losses that often accompany a recession. Consumer spending, which accounts for about two-thirds of economic activity, ticked higher over three months ending in June. Corporate earnings have remained robust. The jobs report sent stocks tumbling but markets have since recovered. "It seems to me people are anchoring on the jobs report and using it to telegraph a recession. I'm not sure it does that," Mark Blyth, a professor of political economy at Brown University, told ABC News. "Nobody knows and everybody is doing wish fulfillment," Blyth added. "If you don't like the administration's policies, you're willing it to be a recession and if you like them, you're saying, 'no.'" MORE: What $4 trillion in debt from Trump's spending measure could mean for future generations To be sure, recession forecasts are hardly bulletproof. A surge of inflation in 2021 -- and an interest-rate hike soon afterward -- unleashed a flood of recession warnings, but no downturn came to pass. More recently, Wall Street banks predicted a possible recession after Trump's "Liberation Day" tariff announcement, before pulling back their assessments after Trump dialed back the levies. "Recessions tend to be unforecastable," Claudia Sahm, chief economist at New Century Advisors and a former Fed official, told ABC News. "Often there's an event that causes people to lose confidence, change behavior and start a downward spiral. Those events are very hard to predict." Still, Sahm added, the available data indicates a weakened economy. "A slow-growing economy is not a good economy," Sahm said. "We want to avoid a recession but avoiding a recession is a low bar. We want an economy that's better than that." Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Boston Globe
9 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
Trump claims Democrats are denying Republicans congressional districts in Mass. See the maps for yourself.
But that's not the only way Massachusetts has come into the conversation. Advertisement Amid Texas' ongoing redistricting controversy this week, and plenty of Democratic backlash, Trump Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'If you look at what's going on with the redistricting, or whatever you want to call it, the Democrats have done it long before we started,' he said following an executive order signing Tuesday afternoon. 'I got 40 percent [of the presidential vote] in Massachusetts, and yet they have 100 percent of the vote in terms of Congress. So there's no Republican, there's no anything. So I should, we should, have 40 percent. You know why? They redistricted.' Is there any truth to Trump's claims, and would it even be possible to draw a congressional district in Massachusetts with a Republican majority? In short, not really. Advertisement Trump won 36 percent of the Massachusetts presidential vote in 2024 (about 1.2 million votes), not 40 percent or 41 percent as he claimed Tuesday morning in a Trump did not win the majority of votes as of 2023. Massachusetts has not elected a Republican to the House for 31 years. In that time, the state's congressional districts have been redrawn three times, following the 2000, 2010, and 2020 censuses, as is required of states by the Constitution. The most drastic change to the state's congressional districts occurred following the 2010 census, when Massachusetts lost its 10th district (also a Democratic seat) due to low population growth. The state's current congressional districts were signed into law by Republican former governor Charlie Baker Under federal law, districts within a state must have roughly equal populations. Based on the 2020 census, the average population for each House seat is a little over 760,000 people. Districts must also be one, uninterrupted shape. The federal Voting Rights Act also dictates that congressional districts cannot be drawn with the intent of suppressing the voting rights of people of color. Advertisement In Massachusetts, the majority of registered voters — In 2024, five of Massachusetts' nine House members Though there are plenty of Republican-leaning voters in Massachusetts, it would be practically impossible to create a Republican-controlled congressional district because the state's major population hubs tend to vote Democratic. A red congressional district, no matter how wonkily drawn, would likely lack the required population size to qualify. When Democratic Secretary of State Bill Galvin was asked Tuesday if Massachusetts might draw a new Congressional map before the next census as Texas is attempting to do, Galvin said it is unlikely. 'We have no Republicans to give,' he said. Julian E.J. Sorapuru can be reached at


Atlantic
10 minutes ago
- Atlantic
The Fight to Plan America's Birthday Party
President Trump's attempted takeover of America's 250th-anniversary celebration began this spring when his team drew up a $33 million fundraising plan for a series of events starring the president, including a military parade in Washington. America250 had been founded by Congress as a bipartisan effort, with a mission to engage '350 million Americans for the 250th.' But Trump kicked off the final year of preparations with a political rally at the Iowa State Fairgrounds, attacking Democrats before a crowd that waved America250 signs. 'I hate them,' Trump proclaimed July 3. 'I cannot stand them, because I really believe they hate our country.' Around the same time, Trump's top political appointee at America250, a former Fox News producer named Ariel Abergel, moved to gain greater influence over the bipartisan commission. He called four Republican commissioners, who had been appointed years ago by then–Speaker of the House Paul Ryan and then–Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, with a blunt request: Consider resigning to make way for new appointees. That request was reiterated by current House Speaker Mike Johnson, who applied pressure to one appointee at the request of the White House. But rather than solidify Trump's control over the organization, the calls appear to have backfired, setting off a struggle for control of the organization, according to interviews with eight people briefed on the recent turmoil in the organization, who spoke with me on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. The four targeted commissioners ultimately refused to resign, despite two initially signaling their intent to comply. Johnson's office decided to back off, and Senate Majority Leader John Thune has indicated that he seeks no changes to the commission, according to people familiar with their thinking. Then other members of the commission, which Abergel works for, began discussing efforts to push him out of his job, arguing that his decision to ask for the resignations had demonstrated his lack of judgement. 'This position should have been reserved for a much more experienced and substantive candidate,' one of the commissioners told me, reflecting the views expressed by others. 'The 250th is too important as a milestone for our country to jeopardize it with someone who doesn't take it seriously.' T. H. Breen: Trump's un-American parade Abergel defended his actions and argued that he had been acting in concert with the House speaker to request that 'certain inactive members of the commission' resign. 'The speaker has every right to make his own appointments to the commission,' he told me in a statement. 'While some anonymous individuals are focused on lying to the fake news, my focus remains the same: to make America250 the most patriotic celebration in American history.' The nation's leaders have been planning since 2016 for next year's celebrations to mark the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, which are expected to involve events in each of the states, including a ball drop in Times Square on July 4, organized in partnership with the commission. The Republican tax bill that Trump signed into law this summer included an additional $150 million for the Department of Interior, which is expected to be spent by the commission in partnership with a new White House task force to celebrate the anniversary, with additional private fundraising from companies such as Coca-Cola and Stellantis. But now, even as the festivities are unfolding, the commission that was established to oversee them is in turmoil. Since winning reelection, Trump has moved swiftly to take control of the federal government's cultural institutions, including the Kennedy Center and National Portrait Gallery. But the United States Semiquincentennial Commission largely answers to the legislative branch, not the White House, and has a sprawling leadership structure that includes sitting senators, members of Congress, and ex officio members such as the secretary of defense and the secretary of state. Ryan Miller: Why I played the Kennedy Center The power to direct the operation resides with an additional 16 'private citizen' commissioners, who are appointed in equal numbers by the Republican and Democratic leaders of the House and Senate for lifetime terms until the completion of the celebrations. Under the law, the forcible removal of commissioners requires a two-thirds vote of the commission, and the president's main power is his ability to appoint a chair from among the private citizens already serving. According to four people familiar with the conversations, the four commissioners whom Abergel asked to resign are the Washington and Lee University professor Lucas Morel, the Hillsdale College professor Wilfred M. McClay, the educator Val Crofts, and Tom Walker, the founder of American Village, a historical-replica development in Alabama. Morel and McClay declined to comment. Crofts and Walker could not be reached for comment. Two people familiar with the commission's work described all four as regular participants in America250 oversight. For the moment, there does not appear to be public pressure from Capitol Hill for a shake-up. 'Johnson is not seeking the resignation of any of the speaker's appointees,' said a person familiar with his thinking, who requested anonymity to discuss the sensitive situation. Someone familiar with Thune's thinking gave me a similar response: 'Thune supports his appointees.' People familiar with the White House planning for America250 have argued that the commission needs more commitment of time and energy from its commissioners for the final year before next summer's festivities. They said the attempt to encourage resignations was blocked, ultimately, by commission bylaws that limit the ability of congressional offices to push out a commissioner. And they made clear that efforts to change the commission makeup could continue. 'So far the best work they have done is being part of this loyal cabal,' said one person familiar with the White House thinking on the sitting commission. 'There has been tremendous frustration with the lack of programmatic purpose, planning, and production.' Others involved in the commission say that such arguments are merely a pretext for political control. Some of the people familiar with the discussion suspect that the White House wants to replace the four Republican comissioners—who are largely apolitical historical boosters and academics—with people more directly loyal to the Trump, including one whom the president could then elevate to replace the commission's chairwoman, Rosie Rios, a former U.S. treasurer during the Obama administration. Republican appointees have been targeted, they argue, because Democratic leaders have no say in who would replace them. (Just this week, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer filled two Democratic vacancies on the commission, appointing Jack Schlossberg, the grandson of former President John F. Kennedy, and Paul R. Tetreault, the director of Ford's Theater, according to a person briefed on the appointments.) White House allies contest this argument, saying Trump could elevate an existing Republican commissioner at any time to replace Rios. Rios allowed the White House to appoint Abergel as the executive director this year, according to people familiar with the conversations. The commission's executive committee, a group led by Rios, then approved the use of the America250 brand and nonprofit for this summer's military parade and Trump rallies, allowing Trump's fundraisers to bring in money to fund the events and green-lighting their production by his former campaign team. But since then, a group of Democratic lawmakers on the commission has questioned the arrangement. Rios has signaled that all future programming decisions will be made with the consultation of the full commission. In an email update sent to the commission on Saturday, which I obtained, Rios recounted a recent planning meeting with White House officials, including Vince Haley, director of the Domestic Policy Council, and Brittany Baldwin from TaskForce250, a separate body Trump set up to commemorate the semiquincentennial in concert with the commission. 'I am pleased to report that we are in agreement about the Commission's vision and how to support and amplify other proposed activities,' Rios wrote in the email. 'As I explained at our last Commission meeting, moving forward, my commitment to this Commission is that any proposed changes to our Playbook will come back to the full Commission for approval.' The White House spokesperson Anna Kelly praised the commission when asked for comment for this story. 'The White House is extremely pleased with the America250 Commission, which is doing a great job leading this historic, unifying celebration of our country's 250th anniversary,' she told me in a statement. The power struggle between Abergel and some members of the commission has been building for reasons beyond the Trump events. Abergel has suggested that 'America's Field Trip,' a contest in which students create art celebrating the country, be moved to a Cabinet agency. Commissioners pushed back against that change. A redesign of the website that Abergel directed added photos of Trump along with corporate logos of the companies funding Trump's parade, and removed any mention of the Ambassador Circle, which named people including the musician Lance Bass, the historian Doris Kearns Goodwin, and former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown as representatives of the effort. Some people on the commission were alarmed by a recent Facebook post announcing an America250 partnership with Moms for Liberty, a conservative group that wants to ban certain books from school curricula and opposes the teaching of liberal ideas of race and gender. 'The branding and marketing had turned strongly around President Trump and strongly partisan looking,' said another person familiar with the commission's discussions. 'The commissioners are united in what is best for America and a great celebration.' Four Democrats on the commission, New Hampshire Senator Jeanne Shaheen, California Senator Alex Padilla, Pennsylvania Representative Dwight Evans, and New Jersey Representative Bonnie Watson Coleman, wrote to Rios and Abergel on July 21, asking about the Trump events and requesting assurances that the commission's programming will be implemented. 'The Chair intends that the Commission and Foundation personnel will execute and implement all approved programming,' Rios and Abergel responded yesterday in a letter, which I obtained. Eliot A. Cohen: A parade of ignorance They told the lawmakers in the letter that the commission had paid for logistics and operations support for the early-summer events headlined by Trump. But congressionally appropriated funds were not used through America250 to directly fund the military parade commemorating the Army's 250th anniversary, the Fort Bragg speech, or the July 3 Iowa kickoff rally for the semiquincentennial. To pay for the efforts, Trump's political fundraiser, Meredith O'Rouke, began raising money for America250 Inc., a foundation created at the behest of the commission. Donors were offered a 'dedicated VIP experience' at the events, according to fundraising documents. America250 subsequently announced donations from a list of companies with executives close to Trump who stand to benefit from his presidency, including Oracle, Lockheed Martin, Ultimate Fighting Championship, Coinbase, Palantir and Amazon. A person briefed on the spending said that America250 ultimately budgeted $33 million for the parade, the Fort Bragg rally, the Iowa rally, a West Point speech, and other events. Of that, $20 million was budgeted for the parade. Army officials have separately said the parade cost the military $30 million to stage, including $3 million to prepare street surfaces for heavy vehicles. Trump previously announced that he plans to stage an Ultimate Fighting Championship bout at the White House in honor of the nation's 250th birthday. People familiar with the planning say that the fight is likely to be organized through the White House task force, not the Semiquincentennial Commission.