Ex-Colombian congresswoman absolved for influence peddling

The court had been investigating former senate president, Nancy Patricia Gutierrez, for allegedly soliciting information from the DAS, Colombia’s now-dismantled internal intelligence agency, about various international trips taken by former Liberal Party senator Piedad Cordoba in 2006.

Guiterrez acknowledged that she had received information from the DAS, but claimed that she had legally solicited the information in order to verify that Cordoba had completed all protocol necessary to excuse oneself from Congress. The Prosecutor General’s Office announced in May that it could not establish Gutierrez had acted in an irregular manner nor that she had accessed illegal privileged information from the DAS.

In 2008, Guiterrez opened proceedings against Cordoba for treason following the latter’s statements while abroad that Colombia was a ‘mafia state.’ Although these charges were eventually dropped, Guiterrez additionally accused Cordoba of having links to FARC officials, an accusation that ended in an 18-year ban for the Liberal Party senator from Congress in 2010.

The Supreme Court also opened a preliminary investigation against Guiterrez in April 2008 for her alleged ties to paramilitary organizations in Cundinamarca during the unfolding scandal now known as “Parapolitics,” in which numerous government officials around Colombia were accused of working with or for illegally armed groups. The Supreme Court has yet to open a formal investigation against the ex-president of the Senate concerning the case.

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