Police knew since last year that the drug lord whose organization conspired with Colombia’s ruling party to rig the 2018 elections in favor of President Ivan Duque sought to jail policemen, according to an internal memo.
The memo was released by attorney Miguel del Rio in an attempt to prevent the jailing of Major Yefferson Tocarruncho and Sergeant Wadith Velasquez earlier this week in an apparent kangaroo trial.
Colombia jails policemen who discovered 2018 election fraud conspiracy
In the memo, the National Police’s intelligence unit DIJIN warned Lieutenant Colonel Luis Fernando Atueste of the police’s human rights unit that an informant had warned them about the alleged plot between drug trafficking Marquitos Figueroa and the Gnecco crime family.
At the meeting on June 21, 2019, was Armando Gnecco, a.k.a. “Mandarino,” who was laundering money for Figueroa as well as the late Jose Guillermo Hernandez, Figueroa’s “political arm” who plotted to rig the elections with Duque’s Democratic Center party, according to the informant.
The notoriously criminal in-laws of one of Colombia’s most famous journalists
Like former President Alvaro Uribe, the boss of the CD, the Gnecco crime family have been associated with both organized crime and politics for decades.
DIJIN memo to human rights unit
The meeting allegedly took place after the murder of Hernandez in Brazil in May and before March when journalists revealed evidence the murdered money launderer had conversations with Uribe’s former personal assistant in which they were plotting election fraud in the month ahead of the 2018 elections.
Wiretapping of drug trafficker reveals vote-buying for Duque on Uribe’s orders
The revelation triggered a Congressional investigation against Duque and the Supreme Court investigation against Uribe, who allegedly ordered to involve the mafia from the north of Colombia in the elections.
The prosecution, on the other hand, appears to be trying to have the wiretaps and recordings that provide the smoking gun in the investigations be declared illegal.
The jailing of the policemen and the fact Figueroa has still not been convicted four years after he was extradited from Brazil indicate how enormous the drug trafficker’s influence is to corrupt Colombia’s democratic system.