Brother of powerful Colombian senator pleads guilty in New York to narcotics smuggling charge

FILE - In this photo provided by the Colombian Police press office, police escort 脕lvaro C贸rdoba during his extradition to the U.S., Jan. 19, 2023, in Bogota, Colombia. C贸rdoba, the brother of a powerful leftist senator in Colombia, pleaded guilty Tuesday, Jan. 2, 2024, to federal narcotics charges as part of a sting in which he offered to introduce U.S. drug informants to dissident guerrillas who could help smuggle huge quantities of cocaine to New York. (Colombian Police press office via AP, File)

New York (AP) 鈥 The brother of a powerful leftist senator in Colombia pleaded guilty Tuesday to federal narcotics charges as part of a sting in which he offered to introduce U.S. drug informants to dissident guerrillas who could help smuggle huge quantities of cocaine to New York.

脕lvaro C贸rdoba, dressed in prison garb, entered a plea in Manhattan federal court to a single count of conspiring to send 500 grams (17 ounces) or more of cocaine into the U.S. He will be sentenced to a mandatory five years in prison but could also face more than two decades behind bars under sentencing laws. His plea does not contain any promise to cooperate with law enforcement.

鈥淚 knew that the cocaine would end up in the United States and I knew what I was doing was wrong," C贸rdoba, who will be sentenced in April, told Judge Lewis J. Liman.

C贸rdoba, 64, was arrested in Medellin, Colombia, in 2022 and almost a year ago by President Gustavo Petro, who was elected with the support of C贸rdoba鈥檚 sister, Sen. Piedad C贸rdoba. The case was something of a minefield for Petro, given his historic ties to the left as a former rebel himself and his newfound role as commander in chief of security forces that have long served in fighting narcotics smuggling in the South American nation.

Piedad C贸rdoba has been a harsh U.S. critic who, under previously conservative Colombian rule, promoted closer ties to Venezuela鈥檚 socialist government and more support for traditionally overlooked Afro-Colombian communities.

While prosecutors have not accused the senator of any involvement in the drug conspiracy, her brother's court-appointed attorney, John Zach, suggested in an October hearing that agents for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration instructed informants to target the politician. And the senator herself likened the sting against her and her brother to the manhunt decades ago that brought down Medellin cartel boss Pablo Escobar.

But her complaints of 鈥減olitical persecution鈥 fell on deaf ears, with Petro shortly after he was elected. Petro's decision was taken as a hopeful sign in Washington, which has relied on Colombia鈥檚 support for more than two decades to limit the supply of cocaine entering the U.S. More recently, however, Petro has lambasted the U.S.-led war on drugs.

Zach declined to comment. The Associated Press sent an email requesting comment to Sen. C贸rdoba.

Although much of the U.S. case against 脕lvaro C贸rdoba remains sealed, Colombian court records from his attempt to block extradition show that a DEA confidential source approached him saying that he was looking for protection inside Colombia to smuggle as much as 3 tons (2.7 metric tons) of cocaine per month through Mexico to New York.

C贸rdoba then put the source in touch with an associate who said he had a large amount of 鈥渃hickens鈥 鈥

C贸rdoba also allegedly offered to make arrangements for the DEA source to visit a clandestine camp in southern Colombian jungles where 300 guerrillas armed with surface-to-air missiles and other weapons would supply and provide safe passage for the narcotics. The rebel unit was run by a holdout commander of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, who refused to go along with a 2016 peace deal that Piedad C贸rdoba helped broker, prosecutors said.

Right before Christmas in 2021, C贸rdoba and an associate delivered to the confidential source and an undercover Colombian official a 5-kilo (11-pound) sample of cocaine in exchange for $15,000, authorities said. A few months later, C贸rdoba was arrested. After being extradited to New York, additional weapons charges against him were dropped.

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Goodman reported from Miami. Follow him on Twitter:

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