Colombia’s Supreme Court will hear the fixer of former President Alvaro Uribe for a second time on Monday over his role in Uribe’s alleged criminal practices to silence witnesses.
Mafia lawyer Diego Cadena, or “gangstattorney” as he has called himself, was summoned to appear for a second hearing after his initial hearing left questions.
Tensions rise in Colombia as top mafia lawyer set to testify in Uribe case
Cadena is under increased pressure over his apparent key role in the former president’s allegedly criminal attempts to erase the Uribe family’s alleged ties to death squads.
Before the Uribe case, the former president’s fixer was already being investigated by the Prosecutor General’s Office. The trial against the former president has only made things worse for Cadena.
Pending criminal charges against Cadena
Evidence against Uribe’s fixer is piling up
Uribe’s very first witness reportedly flipped, admitted having received money from Cadena and even surrendering evidence of this.
A second witness told W Radio she too received money from the former president’s fixer.
These claims add to court evidence that indicates Cadena was coercing witnesses who have testified about the Uribe family’s alleged ties to death squads and drug traffickers both in Colombia and the United States.
Supreme Court
Pressure on Uribe reaches all-time high
Thirty-five years after the first evidence emerged that the Uribe family was involved in the criminal activities of the Medellin Cartel, the judicial pressure on Uribe couldn’t be higher.
Consequently, the pressure on witnesses and the court is too especially after the assassination of a witness in April last year.
The Supreme Court ordered extraordinary protection, not just for those testifying that Uribe is a crook, but against its own magistrates.
The wife and children of one of the key witness claiming Uribe formed a death squad has been forced to go into exile first after attempts to intimidate her days after Uribe asked Cadena about her.
Court transcript
No potential witnesses against the Uribe family have been assassinated last year, but Cadena allegedly has continued his manipulating practices even after his first hearing.
Meanwhile, Uribe’s first day in court on October 8 is inching closer and closer, and questions whether he will still be a free man after that grow louder.