'Borojó', who was not older than 35, was required for the crime of aggravated conspiracy and an international arrest warrant had been issued against him by Interpol . In addition, in Colombia up to 100 million pesos for information that he gave with his location and capture. Towards part of the cartel of the most wanted in the country for events such as the forced displacement of 30 families living in the villages of Fátima and El Cedro in the municipality of Roberto Payán, Nariño, due to the territorial dispute in the area, and of 250 families inhabitants of the municipality of Olaya Herrera, Nariño. He was accused of several attacks against the Public Force and of ordering several homicides for the control of drug trafficking routes in order to comply with the shipment of tons of cocaine to his main partners in Mexico, the 'Jalisco New Generation' poster. (We suggest you read: 25 tons of coca have been seized in semi-submersibles in the Pacific) He had about 220 armed men under his command, "and, in addition to dedicating himself to cocaine trafficking, he collected the so-called grammage tax from other networks to which offered them security in the area," said the researcher. (We suggest you read: The Police file against the country's 'pure narcos')
His beginnings in the criminal worldAnderson Perlaza Caicedo began his criminal life in 2010, when he was part of the urban militias of the extinct FARC in Tumaco, Nariño. "There he committed multiple crimes, such as extortion and collective homicides in order to confront armed groups and urban criminals to win blood and fire territory of interest to the mobile column 'Daniel Aldana' armed structure of the extinct FARC", reads the dossier that the Police had on 'Borojó', to which this newspaper had access. 'Shadow', 'pure narco' who mixed with high society) The document indicates that 'Borojó' quickly, and due to his great criminal performance in the urban militias, became part of the 'Daniel Aldana', where he militated for 5 years and carried out fearsome "terrorist" actions such as guerrilla takeovers of police stations, "miraculous catches" against the civilian population, activation of antipersonnel mines, terrorist attacks using car bombs, attacks on the electrical infrastructure, ambushes of the Public Force where countless policemen, soldiers and marines were killed; the blasting on multiple occasions of the Trasandino pipeline, among other inhumane acts," the dossier highlights. In 2017, after the signing of the peace treaty with the National Government, alias Borojó was part of the 117 men who were brought to justice in Tumaco, but his delivery did not reach a successful judicial term, so he decided to join the dissidents known as 'Óliver Sinisterra', initially under the command of 'Guacho'. (We suggest you read: The Gómez brothers: 'invisible drug traffickers' Mexicans captured in Nariño) After a while, the 'Óliver Sinisterra' suffered an internal division and 'Borojó' decided to go with the alias David faction, which gave way to the birth of the dissidents that call themselves 'United Guerrillas of the Pacific' .
Other news from the Justice section- Controversy revives over the Farc's authorship in the assassination of Álvaro Gómez Hurtado- Red circular against 'El Paisa' and other members of 'Segunda Marquetalia'- Is the sentence against Epa Colombia disproportionate? Lawyers respond on Twitter: @JusticiaET
RJAugust 20, 2021, 11:00 PMAlicia MéndezAugust 20, 2021, 11:00 PMRelated:Personalize, discover and inform yourself.
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