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They can still appeal, but in the meanwhile...they've been found guilty of a horrendous crime.
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Colombia soldiers convicted in murders
By CESAR GARCIA, Associated Press Writer Mon Feb 18, 1:24 PM ET
CALI, Colombia - A cashiered army lieutenant colonel and 14 soldiers were convicted Monday of murdering 10 elite counternarcotics police agents in an ambush that showed how deeply drug corruption threatens Colombia's security forces.
Lt. Col. Byron Carvajal and his soldiers face prison sentences of up to 60 years. Prosecutors want Judge Edmundo Lopez to impose the maximum.
The convictions came despite numerous attempts to subvert the trial, including a prosecutor's offer to help the defense in exchange for more than $400,000, senior police officials and prosecutors familiar with the case told The Associated Press.
The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid jeopardizing investigations, said the bribe was never paid and the prosecutor who sought it had been removed from the case before he made the offer.
Carvajal was convicted of ordering the May 22, 2006, ambush in the town of Jamundi, where an informant told police they would find at least 220 pounds of cocaine at a psychiatric center. When police pulled up, the soldiers cut them down with 420 bullets and seven grenades. No drugs were found.
Carvajal, who was not at the scene, said his soldiers believed they were surprising leftist rebels. The other defendants refused to testify to avoid incriminating themselves.
Defense attorney Eugenio Vergara said the defendants would appeal after April 21 sentencing.
Carvajal claimed innocence even after the verdict, insisting he "had no motive whatsoever to order the murder of these agents."
He and former Lt. Harrison Castro described themselves as wronged patriots: "I've fought so that all you people here today can be free," Castro told the court.
Prosecutors didn't present evidence about suspected motives. Top army officials initially called it tragic "friendly fire." Senior police officials told the AP they believe the soldiers were protecting a major drug trafficker.
One thing is clear, chief prosecutor Mario Iguaran told the AP: "It was a massacre related to organized criminals."
Mafias have long tried to infiltrate security forces, but Colombia's soldiers rarely kill colleagues in the service of drug lords. While witnesses linked Carvajal to Wilson Figueroa, a drug trafficker captured last year in Cali, those ties were not explained.
Colombia has received some $700 million in U.S. foreign aid annually since 2000, much of it for counternarcotics operations.
The slain agents, some of whom trained in the United States, belonged to the most elite unit of Colombia's judicial investigative police, working closely with DEA agents to seize cocaine and arrest traffickers, said Nicolas Munoz, the agency's deputy director.
Most died of shots to the head, neck and chest. In the midst of the fusillade, some managed distress calls, and Gen. Carlos Sanchez issued a radio order to the troops: "Stop. Stop please. Stop, they're police."
Police got off just 30 shots. Not a single soldier was wounded. The courtroom, filled with relatives of the slain officers, was slent as the verdict was read.
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AP Writers Vivian Sequera and Frank Bajak in Bogota contributed to this report.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080218/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/colombia_tainted...
By juancegomez on Feb 18, 2008, 14:26 in Politics & the war.
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Frank Rizzo says on Feb 18, 2008, 15:14: It's horrible.....if it happened again today...there would be another 14 soldiers to do the same thing again. Take the money in that business and mix it with soldiers paid very low and you get a gun battle.
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azunoman says on Feb 18, 2008, 15:56: When the rule of law is imposed, the people are uplifted. Ready, Fire, Aim |
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pilotguy says on Feb 19, 2008, 05:01: I am a little concerned about this one. "Fog of War". If anyone has experienced this, they understand how this could happen. Not sure of all the facts obviously. As an ex soldier, I have a twitch of concern for how this happened. If it is coruption, they should be punished. However, a young soldier responds as orders and is no supposed to think. Joe
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Waterdawg says on Feb 19, 2008, 07:12: Yep, a tough one there Pilot ... Blank statement : One of the problem's with an all Vol. Military in the States ..
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