Three Hostages Were Held in Colombia for More Than Five
Years
Diego Alfonso Navarrete Beltran, 43, a member of the Fuerzas
Armadas Revolucionarias Colombianas (FARC) terrorist organization, was sentenced
today in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to 27 years in
prison on hostage-taking charges stemming from the 2003 kidnappings of three
U.S. citizens in Colombia.
The sentencing was announced by Assistant Attorney General
for National Security John P. Carlin, U.S. Attorney Channing D. Phillips of the
District of Columbia and Special Agent in Charge George L. Piro of the FBI’s
Miami Division.
Navarrete Beltran was
extradited from Colombia to the United States in November 2014 to face charges
in a superseding indictment that was returned in February 2011. He pleaded guilty on Aug. 26, 2015, to three
counts of hostage-taking. He was
sentenced by Senior U.S. District Judge Royce C. Lamberth of the District of
Columbia. Navarrete Beltran is among three FARC leaders who have been convicted
for their roles in the hostage-taking.
“Diego Alfonso Navarrete Beltran participated in the hostage
taking and captivity of three Americans by the FARC, a Colombian terrorist
organization,” said Assistant Attorney General Carlin. “This case underscores our resolve to hold
accountable those who target our citizens with violence anywhere in the world,
no matter how long it takes.”
“Diego Alfonso Navarrete Beltran and other FARC guerillas
ruthlessly subjected their American hostages to constant threats of violence
while holding them in one camp after another in the remote jungles of
Colombia,” said U.S. Attorney Phillips.
“For over 16 months, this defendant was among the armed guards who
prevented their escape. Today’s 27-year
sentence provides justice for the three victims who were subjected to repeated
barbaric abuse by the defendant and others while part of this terrorist
organization.”
“Diego Alfonso Navarrete Beltran now faces a long time
behind bars for his participation in the hostage-taking of three U.S. Citizens
in Colombia,” said Special Agent in Charge Piro. “To all hostage-takers the message is clear:
target our citizens with violence anywhere in the world and we will hold you
accountable for your actions.”
According to a statement of offense submitted as part of the
plea hearing, the FARC is an armed, violent organization in Colombia, formed in
1964 as the armed wing of the Colombian Communist Party. It has evolved into a major armed force
financed by drug trafficking, hostage-taking and extortion. International human rights organizations have
repeatedly accused the FARC of serious crimes, including kidnapping, murder,
use of land mines, threats, the recruitment of minors, forced displacement and
hostage-taking. The FARC was designated
as a foreign terrorist organization by the U.S. Secretary of State in 1997 and
remains so designated.
As described in the statement of offense, Navarrete Beltran
was a member of the First Front in the FARC’s Eastern Bloc.
In his plea, he admitted taking part in the hostage-taking
of three U.S. citizens, Marc D. Gonsalves, Thomas R. Howes and Keith
Stansell. These three individuals, along
with Thomas Janis, a U.S. citizen, and Sergeant Luis Alcides Cruz, a Colombian
citizen, were seized on Feb. 13, 2003, by the FARC after their single engine
aircraft made a crash landing near Florencia, Colombia. Janis and Cruz were murdered at the crash
site by members of the FARC.
For the next five and a half years, according to the
statement of offense, Gonsalves, Howes, Stansell and many others were held
prisoners by the FARC and used to bargain with the Colombian government. Along with about a dozen Colombian hostages,
they were forced to march from one site to another to prevent their
rescue. They were threatened, chained
and forced to participate in proof-of-life videos. In early October 2006, the hostages were
delivered to the FARC’s Eastern Bloc’s First Front and were held prisoners by
the First Front of the FARC.
From October 2006 through mid-June 2008, according to the
statement of offense, Navarrete Beltran and other guerillas kept the hostages
under the control of the FARC’s First Front.
In particular, Navarrete Beltran often served as an armed guard of the
American hostages.
In July 2008, the Colombian military conducted an operation
which resulted in the rescue of the hostages.
All told, members of the FARC held the Americans hostage for 1,967 days.
This investigation is being led by the FBI’s Miami Field
Division. The prosecution is being
handled by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Kenneth Kohl and Fernando Campoamor-Sanchez
of the District of Columbia, and Trial Attorney David Cora of the National
Security Division’s Counterterrorism Section.
Substantial assistance in the case was provided by the
Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs, the department’s Judicial
Attachés in Colombia, the FBI’s Office of the Legal Attaché in Colombia and the
FBI’s Washington, D.C., Field Office.
No comments:
Post a Comment