The former chief justice of Colombia’s Supreme Court prostituted justice and should be in jail for posing a threat to society, the prosecution argued after the shock arrest of the judicial heavyweight.
A Bogota parole judge agreed. “Justice is hurt,” the Supreme Court’s former Chief Justice, Francisco Ricaurte, heard before being denied bail and sent to Bogota’s La Picota prison.
Media had been speculating for days that the arrest of Ricaurte and Justice Gustavo Malo could be impending.
The two judicial heavyweights were among the first to be implicated in an epic corruption scandal in which congressmen, drug traffickers and paramilitary chiefs allegedly bought their innocence.
Colombia’s former Supreme Court chief justice arrested on corruption charges
The scandal, which is still unfolding, has plunged Colombia’s state system in the biggest crisis in recent memory. The very institutions embroiled in the bribery scandal are now in charge of investigating themselves.
Ricaurte and his alleged co-conspirators “prostituted” justice, according to prosecutor Jaime Camacho who asked a parole judge to jail the former chief justice for corrupting the very top of Colombia’s justice sytem.
Prosecutor Jaime Camacho
According to jailed anti-corruption prosecutor Gustavo Moreno, Ricaurte received hundreds of thousands of dollars to deny an arrest warrant for Congressman Musa Besayle (U Party), a political ally of President Juan Manuel Santos.
However, this case is just the tip of the iceberg of the criminal activity of Ricaurte and his co-conspirators in the justice system, according to the prosecution.
Prosecutor Jaime Camacho
Ricaurte’s extensive network in all branches of government makes him an imminent threat to society, the prosecutor calling for a denial of parole told the judge.
Prosecutor Jaime Camacho
The former chief justice had applied for a position in the transitional justice tribunal that is part of a peace process with the FARC, but was left out as corruption allegations were mounting.
The arrest of Ricaurte, who was chief justice in the years dozens of congressmen appeared before the Supreme Court for their alleged ties to paramilitary groups, has discredited the presumed innocence of powerful politicians absolved by the judges now under criminal investigation.
The most prominent of these politicians, former Vice-President German Vargas, was absolved by former Supreme Court president Leonidos Bustos, an alleged member of the corruption Ricaurte allegedly belonged to.
Prosecutor General Nestor Humberto Martinez, reportedly a political ally of Vargas, personally appointed the anti-corruption prosecutor now wanted for extradition by the United States.
Martinez’ delegate prosecutor before the Supreme Court, Luz Mabel Parra, reportedly was the auxiliary judge who led the dropped investigation against Vargas, now one of the leading candidates in the race leading up to the 2018 elections.
According to political news website La Silla Vacia, Ricaurte was the “visible head” of “a group of judges who took power in the justice system at the tip of ‘I choose you, you choose me’.”
However, this alleged network of clientelism could have members throughout Colombia’s state system.
To what extent one prosecutor is able to unravel this is the big uncertainty as those suspected of criminal behavior are the ones who effectively control the system.