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Related: About this forumKey suspect in Jaime Garzon murder case captured in central Colombia
Key suspect in Jaime Garzon murder case captured in central Colombia
Jul 31, 2014 posted by Daniel Medendorp Escobar
An ex-colonel accused of plotting the 1999 murder of one of Colombias most beloved comedians, Jaime Garzon, has been captured, Colombian media reported on Thursday.
Jorge Eliecer Plazas Acevedo, the ex-colonel in question, was captured in San Martin, in the central state of Meta early Thursday morning after a one year search. Although Garzons assassination has been attributed to paramilitaries, certain sectors of the military have been implicated in his killing, including Plazas, according to national newspaper El Tiempo.
Plazas was found wearing what many farmers would wear in the area near where he was captured, making him indistinguishable from the general population, according to national news magazine Semana.
According to testimonies from convicted drug lord Don Berna, Plazas played a central role in the planning and execution of the operation that would end up in the assassination of Garzon.
More:
http://colombiareports.co/key-suspect-jaime-garzon-murder-case-captured-central-colombia/
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Jaime Garzon, wrapped in the Colombian flag.[/center]
Louisiana1976
(3,962 posts)Judi Lynn
(160,217 posts)Document Points to Military/Paramilitary Nexus in Murder of Popular Colombian Comedian
Who Killed Jaime Garzón?
Document Points to Military/Paramilitary Nexus in Murder of Popular Colombian Comedian
Garzón Had Been "Deeply Troubled" by Meeting with Senior Army Officer
Ongoing Impunity in 12-year-old Case Spurs Inter-American Commission Complaint
National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 360
Posted - September 29, 2011
Washington, D.C., September 29, 2011 - Twelve years after the assassination of beloved Colombian journalist and political satirist Jaime Garzón, a newly-declassified State Department cable, published on the Web today by the National Security Archive (www.nsarchive.org ), supports longstanding allegations that Colombian military officials ordered the killing. Written just days after the murder, the cable from the U.S. Embassy in Colombia says that Garzón had been killed by paramilitaries in league with loose cannon active or retired members of the security forces.
One of Colombia's most popular television personalities, Garzón was also a high-profile advocate for government talks with leftist rebel groups when he was gunned down on August 13, 1999. Carlos Castaño, top leader of an illegal right-wing militia known as the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC), was convicted in absentia of masterminding the plot in 2001 but was never brought to justice and is now presumed dead. Castaño remains the only individual ever sentenced in the case, though the involvement of Colombian security forces has long been suspected.
The document published today is among key evidence cited by lawyers representing Garzón's family who are seeking to hold the Colombian state responsible for his murder. Last month, human rights attorneys from the Colectivo de Abogados José Alvear Restrepo and the Comisión Colombiana de Juristas jointly requested a hearing on the Garzón case before the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights (IACHR).
Of particular interest in the newly-declassified cable is the revelation that retired general Rito Alejo del Río Rojas may have lied in a 2001 declaration before Colombian prosecutors when he denied that he had ever met Garzón. Quite the contrary, the embassy report says that Del Río upbraided Garzón when the two met to discuss his efforts to restart peace negotiations with the ELN guerrilla group. The embassys confidential source said that Garzón "came away from the meeting very troubled by the depths of the anger that Del Río vented."
More:
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB360 /