Clan del Golfo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Clan del Golfo
Leaders
Dates of operation2001–present
HeadquartersUrabá, Colombia
IdeologyAnti-communism
Conservatism
Political positionRight-wing
SizeUnknown
OpponentsELN and FARC dissidents

The Clan del Golfo (English: The Gulf Clan), also known as Gaitanist Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (Autodefensas Gaitanistas de Colombia – AGC) and formerly called Los Urabeños and Clan Úsuga, is a prominent Colombian neo-paramilitary group and currently the country's largest drug cartel.

Los Urabeños is one of the most powerful criminal organizations in Colombia. The crime syndicate recruits its members mainly from former right-wing paramilitaries and is said to have around 6,000 men under arms. In addition to drug trafficking, the Gulf clan is also involved in illegal mining and racketeering and is responsible for numerous murders and expulsions.[5] It is based in the Urabá region of Antioquia, and is involved in the Colombian armed conflict.[6][7][8]

Los Urabeños is one of the organizations that appeared after the demobilization of the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia. In late 2011 Los Urabeños declared war on Los Rastrojos over the control of the drug trade in Medellín.[9] Their main source of income is cocaine trafficking as they appear to be the largest distributors of cocaine in all of Colombia.[10][8] As of late 2021, it is considered the most powerful criminal organization in Colombia, having some 3,000 members in the inner circle of the organization in 2016 with its current numbers unknown.[11][12] Its rivals include the National Liberation Army. The Gulf Clan has recruited accomplices at the highest level of the military hierarchy, such as generals and colonels.[13][14]

One of the many groups made up of former mid-level paramilitary leaders, the Clan have caused homicide rates to skyrocket in Colombia's northern departments. It is currently one of the more ambitious and ruthless of Colombia's drug trafficking organizations (DTOs). The group's power base is currently in the Antioquia, Sucre and Córdoba departments, with a presence in various other departments and regions in the country including major cities such as Medellín and Bogotá.[15] Currently, the Clan is likely the single largest distributor of cocaine in the world having formed direct, highly-lucrative partnerships with drug cartels in Mexico as well as European crime group such as 'Ndrangheta who made their billions in profit from the illegal cocaine trade with the Clan.[8][16]

In June 2020, the Colombian National Police revealed that former Los Rastrojos member Marlon Gregorio Celis Caballero, alias 'Loquillo or Felipe', had become the new leader of the Clan del Golfo by April 2020.[17] At the time of this revelation, the Clan del Golfo reduced its drug trafficking route to the Caribbean region and also named a Ciénaga native with the alias "Diana" as the new head trafficker.[17] However, the Clan del Golfo has also been distracted by a direct conflict with FARC dissidents.[18][19] On October 23, 2021, the group's leader Dario Antonio Úsuga David, better known as Otoniel, was captured. At the time of his arrest, Otoniel was Colombia's most wanted drug lord.[20] Following the arrest of Otoniel, President of Colombia Iván Duque Márquez described the weakened Clan del Golfo as "over" and claimed that "its days are numbered".[21]

Origins[edit]

For the "Clan del Golfo," before named "Los Urabeños" from Urabá, the northwestern region near the Panamanian border is highly prized by drug traffickers as it offers access to the Caribbean and Pacific coast, from the departments of Antioquia and Chocó. However, the origins of the group can be traced elsewhere, in Colombia's Eastern Plains, where Daniel Rendón Herrera, better known as ‘Don Mario,’ once handled finances for the paramilitary group Bloque Centauros.

Cocaine traffickers had long competed with the FARC for territory and influence in the Eastern Plains. In 1997, top paramilitary commanders Carlos and Vicente Castaño began sending troops to the area to co-opt the drug business from the guerrillas. In 2001, the Castaños sold one of their armed groups, later known as Bloque Centauros, to another warlord, Miguel Arroyave, allegedly for US$7 million. It was Arroyave who convinced Rendón Herrera to come work for him. Under Rendón's supervision, the Centauros became one of the wealthiest factions within the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombian (Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia – AUC). The Centauros trafficked cocaine, propped up local politicians, extorted ranchers and farmers, and collected security taxes for products ranging from alcohol to petroleum.

But the Centauros soon began clashing with a rival paramilitary group, the Peasant Self-Defense Forces of Casanare (Autodefensas Campesinas del Casanare – ACC). The ACC is one of the oldest vigilante groups in Colombia, headed by Héctor Germán Buitrago Parada, alias ‘Martín Llanos’. It was allegedly ACC fighters who first began calling the Centauros "those from Urabá," "Paisas," or "Urabeños," all references to the Antioquia region where many of the paramilitaries hailed from.

By 2004, the fierce war between the ACC and the Centauros had left an estimated 3,000 people dead. Rendón fled the Eastern Plains in June after a falling out with Arroyave. Rendón then found refuge in the Urabá region, where his brother Freddy, alias ‘El Aleman,’ headed his own paramilitary group, the Bloque Elmer Cardenas. Shortly afterward, Arroyave was ambushed and killed by his former allies, including Pedro Oliveiro Guerrero, alias ‘Cuchillo.’

When Freddy Rendón chose to demobilize in 2006, his brother ‘Don Mario’ seized the opportunity to expand his drug trafficking operations in the Urabá gulf. He recruited many of the fighters once under Freddy's command, as well as ex-members from the defunct AUC. From Urabá, the DTO deployed go-fast boats loaded with cocaine to Central America or the Caribbean, with some estimates putting it at 10 to 20 boats per week. By 2008, Rendón Herrera was one of the richest and most-wanted traffickers in Colombia.

As the AUC blocs were officially demobilized, this new paramilitary groups called themselves Gaitanist Self-Defense Forces or Don Mario's Black Eagles in an attempt to legitimize their actions.[22][23]

Rendón attempted to expand his empire, moving into southern Córdoba, the Lower Cauca region in northern Antioquia and even venturing into Medellin, long controlled by the feared Oficina de Envigado. Rendón's men soon began clashing with the Paisas, then a rural, armed wing of the Oficina. Police blamed Rendón's organization for at least 3,000 homicides between 2007 and 2009. On April 15, 2009, a team of 200 police commandos captured Rendón on a farm in rural Urabá.

Since Rendón's capture, the remnants of his organization had fallen under the control of the Usuga-David brothers, Juan de Dios and Dario Antonio, two former mid-ranking paramilitaries believed to have worked with Rendón since the 1990s. The two started with an estimated 250 men following Rendón's arrest, and have since managed to grow exponentially.[24][25]

On January 1, 2012, Juan de Dios Usuga-David, alias "Giovany," was killed in a police raid on a ranch in the Chocó department. Three Clan del Golfo members with him were injured and arrested during the shootout with the police as well.[26] In a surprising display of strength, the Gulf Clan organized a series of coordinated strikes protesting his deaths in northern Antioquia, handing out fliers which referred to the group's former name, the Gaitanista Self-Defense Forces. The Gulf Clan also signaled their intention to respond aggressively to their leader's death when they publicly offered a $1,000 reward for each police officer killed in Antioquia, a public relations strategy best associated with kingpin Pablo Escobar. His brother Dario Antonio Úsuga David alias "Otoniel", afterward succeeded him as head of the cartel.[4] On October 23, 2021, Otoniel was apprehended by Colombian military forces.[27]

They take their name from Jorge Eliécer Gaitán, a former Colombian activist leader.[28][29]

Territory and presence[edit]

According to a November 2021 InsightCrime report, the Clan reportedly has a strong presence in the Colombian departments of Antioquia, Córdoba and Sucre, a moderate presence in the departments of Cauca, Valle del Cauca, Chocó, Nariño, Bolívar, Atlántico, Magdalena, Norte de Santander and a low or minimal presence in the departments of Cesar, Santander, Boyacá, La Guajira, Risaralda, Casanare, Meta and Vichada.[30]

Organization and structure[edit]

The Gulf Clan rely on at least 1,200 members in their top level of command. Their base is near and around the Urabá gulf, including the Tierralta and Valencia municipalities in Cordoba and the eleven municipalities in the Urabá sub-region in Antioquia. The arrest of Urabá regional leader Eduardo Ortiz Tuberquia, alias "El Indio," in May 2017 and the deaths of second-in-command, Roberto Vargas Gutiérrez, alias "Gavilán," in September 2017 and military boss Luis Orlando Padierma, alias "Inglaterra," in November 2017 gave overall leader Dario Antonio Úsuga David, alias "Otoniel", tenuous authority over the Gulf Clan, with regional leaders gaining more direct authority over their territories.[31]

The top command deploys teams of trained, armed men to rural areas vital for drug-trafficking operations. These include zones with natural seaports along the Caribbean coast, or areas where coca base must be bought, like Caucasia or Tarazá in Antioquia (InSight has also heard reports of an Urabeño cell in Medellín). These cells then attempt to recruit local informants, especially collaborators who can inform them of the actions of the security forces.[citation needed]

The Gulf Clan are also known to contract local street gangs who help with the retail and mid-level distribution of cocaine, extortion and select assassination. By "sponsoring" other low-level gangs, this group has been able to maintain small, select cells of highly disciplined men in the field, responsible for ever-larger swathes of territory. There are also indications that the group has been successful enough in terms of recruitment to move into other key territories like Barrancabermeja, Santander, one of Colombia's oil towns long prized by the Rastrojos.[citation needed]

When it comes to drug trafficking, the Gulf Clan are similar to rival DTOS like the Rastrojos or the Paisas in that they are uninterested in controlling the entire chain of drug production. But they have not proved as adept as the Rastrojos when it comes to brokering key alliances with other major players in the drug trade. The Gulf Clan will buy coca base from the FARC, but the two groups will not collaborate much further than that. What is helping the Clan compete so far is their military discipline: so far they have proved immune to the kind of infighting tearing apart the Paisas or the Oficina. The Gulf Clan may yet prove themselves capable of expanding their operations beyond the Caribbean coast and northern Colombia if they are not derailed by their war with the Rastrojos.[citation needed]

The organization has emerged from paramilitarism and continues to specifically target political parties, unions and leftist associations. It is one of the main perpetrators of selective assassinations of community and social leaders, leftist political activists and forced displacement of people. In October 2017, it published a pamphlet entitled "Pistol Plan against the Patriotic Union" in which it threatened members of this political party or NGOs with death.

On September 1, 2017, the second-in-command of the Gulf Clan (alias Gavilán[32][33] ) was killed during a shootout with police.[32][31] Inglaterra, who was the group's fifth in command,[34] was injured during this shootout as well[35] and later died in November 2017.[31] The three remaining leaders remained free (alias Otoniel, Carlos Moreno, alias Nicolás and Aristides Meza, alias El Indio). However, Meza, who served as third-in-command, was during a shootout with police on March 28, 2018.[36] A successor who used the alias "Samuel" was later arrested on May 21, 2018,[37] while Nicolás was arrested on August 6, 2018.[38] In October 2018, it was reported that as a result of the deaths and arrests of these three senior leaders within a year of either each other, the Gulf Clan saw a major reorganization in its leadership, with Giovanis Ávila Villadiego, alias "Chiquito Malo," reportedly the main person in charge of maritime trafficking routes to the United States and Europe; Nelson Darío Hurtado Simanca, alias "Marihuano," in command of the Central Urabá Bloc (Bloque Central Urabá) and some 700 men in the Caribbean sub-region; and other commanders of regional blocs.[39]

In August 2019, the cartel's chief financier Carlos Mario Úsuga, also known as "Cuarentano," was arrested.[40] He is a brother of Otenial and was reported to have taken over the cartel's financial operations following the arrest of their sister Nini Johana in December 2013.[40] Two other brothers of Otoniel, Angel Eusebio and Fernando Umbeiro Úsuga, were arrested in 2018 as well.[40] Cuarentano was also revealed to have been in charge of the cartel's trafficking routes and oversaw Chiquito Malo's trafficking as well.[1][2] It was also reported that rather than Chiquito Malo, fellow Cuarentano-employed trafficker Darío Úsuga Torres, alias "Pueblo," was named by Colombian police as Cuarentano's most likely successor.[1] Both Pueblo, who is an Úsuga family relative,[1] and Ciquito Malo were high ranking on the declining list of potential successors to Cuarentano.[1][2] However, by the time she was re-arrested on March 17, 2021, Nini Johana was once again managing the Clan del Golfo's illicit finances resulting from narco-trafficking and money laundering.[41]

Between January and August 2019, Colombian police reported 339 captures and nine members killed in Public Force operations, in addition, the seizure of 12.6 tons of cocaine hydrochloride which, according to the authorities, leads to close the fence over the heir to a structure that spread throughout the country.[1] Members of Clan del Golfo who served as liaisons with other Colombian drug cartels were among those arrested.[42] The cartel was also estimated to have been reduced to having only 1,500 armed men.[1][2] By August 2019, 16 members of the Úsuga family had also been arrested in less than a six-year period.[2] In December 2019, senior Clan del Gulfo drug trafficker and money launderer Joaquin Guillermo David-Usuga was extradited from Colombia to the U.S city of Houston, Texas.[43]

In March 2020, Marihuano was revealed to be living in the Darién Jungle in cabins he built himself.[44] His police record was also made public, which revealed that he had court documentation despite still being wanted.[44] It was also suggested that his role in the cartel was exaggerated a little and that while he was heavily involved in the cartel, and serving as the cartel's No. 2, he was more of a regional leader in the Colombian areas of Riosucio, Juradó, Unguía and Acandí than an international trafficker, extending only as far as the Panama border, and is the leader of close to 1,000 members of the cartel's Colombian armed forces.[44] He is wanted for not only drug trafficking, but also numerous atrocities in the departments of Córdoba, Antioquia and Chocó and has a bounty of up to 580 million pesos for his capture.[44] On April 25, 2020, cartel leader Gustavo Adolfo Álvarez Téllez, who was one of Colombia's most wanted drug lords and also had a bounty of up to 580 million pesos for his capture, was arrested at his lavish estate in Cereté while holding a party under quarantine during the COVID-19 pandemic.[45][3] Álvarez was described as the "brain" of the cartel,[3] and by this point was reported to have taken charge of the cartel's Caribbean operations.[46]

On May 4, 2020, leader of the cartel's violent Jorge Iván Arboleda Garcés’ fraction Aureliano Pérez Caballero, alias Dávinson, was arraigned in court following his arrest the previous day.[47][48][49] On May 27, 2020, the leader of the cartel's Carlos Vazquez fraction, identified as "Fabian," and seven of his associates were arrested.[50][47] On May 29, 2020, the Carlos Vazquez fraction's weapons supplier Jhon Olmedo Ramirez, alias "Guajiro," was captured along with 9,000 rifle cartridges, a van, 10 suppliers of long-range weapons and 2 cell phones.[51] On May 28, 2020, notorious Gulf Clan hitman Yelson Andres Mes Perez, alias "Yeisito," and also the woman arrested with him were jailed.[52][53]

On June 8, 2020, three Gulf Clan members who were planning to kill civilians in Chocó were arrested.[54] On June 12, 2020, Urabá police arrested alleged Clan del Golfo member Alexander Asprilla, alias "Perea."[55] Perea was suspected of being involved in selective killings in the municipalities of Bahía Solano, Nuquí, Juradó, as well as other townships and villages of the area.[55] On June 13, 2020, it was revealed that 26 Clan del Golfo members were arrested in Santa Marta.[56] Among those detained were local leaders thought to be responsible for a recent wave of violence.[56] It was also revealed that 48 Clan del Golfo members, including 5 local leaders, had been detained in Santa Marta since the beginning of 2020.[56]

On June 23, 2020, the Colombian National Police revealed in a national radio broadcast that shortly before the arrest of Téllez, a former member of the rival Los Rastrojos criminal group Marlon Gregorio Celis Caballero, alias 'Loquillo' or 'Felipe', was named "as the new leader of the Gulf Clan."[17] An operative from Ciénaga with the alias "Diana" was also named as head of the cartel's financial operations, money laundering and drug trafficking operations.[17] Under Loquillo's leadership, the Clan del Golfo concentrates its criminal actions on the Caribbean Trunk, especially in Santa Marta and the surrounding municipalities of the Magdalena department, using new platforms large cocaine shipments through boats that dock near the municipalities of Magdalena in Puebloviejo and Ciénaga.[17] On June 26, 2020, it was revealed that the Clan del Golfo had started a direct conflict with FARC dissidents called Operation Mil and dispatched 1,000 of its paramilitaries from Urabá, southern Córdoba and Chocó to remove FARC dissents from northern Antioquia and control the entire municipality of Ituango.[18]

On September 19, 2020, The Economist described the Clan del Golfo as now a group "composed of demobilized right-wing paramilitaries."[19] On October 8, 2020, it was revealed that El Soldado was killed in the course of military operations in the Antioquia region of Lower Cacua.[57] Prior to his death El Soldado was serving as the leader of the Julio César Vargas substructure of the Clan del Golfo.[57] In addition to the Colombian military killing El Soldado, the Colombian National Police confirmed the arrests of 13 members of Clan del Golfo's "Héroes del Caribe", which serves a cell of the cartel's Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, in Cartagena.[57] Among those arrested included regional Clan del Golfo leader Edwin Enrique Caballero Santander, known under the alias of El Brother.[57] At this time, it was also revealed that military operations which had been carried out in the Colombian regions of Antioquia, Atlántico, Córdoba and Sucre had significantly diminished the influence of the Clan del Golfo.[57]

On October 8, 2020, imprisoned former Clan del Golfo leader Jhony Fidel Cuello-Petro, alias Mocho, arrived in Houston after being extradited from Colombia.[58] Colombian authorities took Mocho into custody in November 2018.[58] On October 15, 2020, one of two Clan del Golfo members who killed a man at a car wash located in the Yalí department in Antioquia was killed by the members of the Colombian National Army, while the other was captured.[59] On October 16, 2020, Colombian National Police announced that a senior Clan del Golfo financier who served leader of cartel's Edwin Román Velázquez Valle substructure was among four Edwin Román Velázquez Valle members who were arrested in the Antioquia municipalities of Buriticá, Saznta Fe and Livorina.[60] According to National Police officer Colonel William Castaño, head of the National Unit against Illegal Mining and Antiterrorism, the senior Clan Del Golfo financier, identified as "Diego," "was in charge of the extortion of merchants and people dedicated to the extraction of minerals in this part of the country."[60]

On October 28, 2020, it was reported that the Colombian and Panamanian security forces seized more than two tons of cocaine hydrochloride belonging to the Clan del Golfo.[61] This resulted in the cartel losing $70 million.[61] Four Colombians and one Honduran on the submarine which contained the cocaine hydrochloride were arrested as well.[61] On November 17, 2020, alleged financier and route coordinator of the Clan del Golfo Jorge Eliécer Castaño Toro, alias "Plástico," and his deputy Darwin Abad Sierra, alias "number 17," were arrested by Colombian National Police.[62]

Between December 30, 2020, and January 2, 2021, 181 Clan del Golfo members were successfully targeted in Operation Agamemnon, with the Colombia Presidency and Colombian National releasing a joint statement revealing that "The mission was structured in 38 operations with 117 search procedures and raids, which resulted in 177 arrests and four neutralizations."[63] Among those arrested was John Fredy Zapata Garzón, alias Messi or Candado, and seven of his closest collaborators.[64] Colombian National Police Major General Fernando Murillo Orrego, head of the Directorate of Criminal Investigation and Interpol (DIJIN), "Zapata Garzón ran a narco-trafficking and money laundering organization associated with the Clan del Golfo" The DIJIN also released a statement revealing that Zapata Garzón shared routes for drug trafficking to Europe and the United States with the Clan del Golfo, through shell companies, investments, and real estate and personal properties in 17 Departments of Colombia.[64] In December 2020, the U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned Zapata Garzón "for materially assisting the international narcotics trafficking activities of the Clan del Golfo."[65][64] The joint federal statement, which was released on January 4, 2021, also revealed that the number of Clan del Golfo members arrested during the phase of Operation Agamemnon that started on December 30, 2020, had by then grown to 198.[63][66]

In March 2021, the Clan del Golfo's structures suffered major blows with arrests of 25 more members.[41] According to the Colombian Navy, those arrested are alleged to have been responsible for smuggling more than 13 tons of cocaine into Honduras, Costa Rica, and Panama during 19 drug trafficking operations.[41] Nini Jhoana Úsuga, alias La Negra, would be recaptured during these arrests.[41] Main Clan del Golfo leader Rubén D. Meléndez, alias Porrón, and Clan del Golfo weapons supplier and alleged FARC associate Martín Boyaco were among those arrested as well.[41] Porrón was arrested on March 13, 2021, while Boyaco, who was believed to have provide financing to the Clan del Golfo by supplying weapons to FARC dissident leader Iván Mordisco, was arrested on March 11, 2021.[41] On August 18, 2021, Colombia security forces arrested Luis Daniel Santan Hernández, alias Machete. Machete, who was wanted by the Colombian government since 2017 and who was captured shortly before he was scheduled to get married, was not only the coordinator of security, logistics and criminal activities of other Clan del Golfo leaders stationed in western Antioquia but was also regarded as "leader of the largest criminal gang in Colombia."[67]

AKA "Siopas", number two in the AGC organisation, is found dead in February 2023. He appears to have been the victim of an internal purge.[68]

Colombian President Gustavo Petro announced that he was suspending a ceasefire between the armed forces of Colombia and the Gulf Clan following an attack on an aqueduct and shooting at police officers. The President also accused the cartel of inciting a protest from informal gold miners.[69]

At the time of his New York sentencing in August 2023, Dario Antonio Úsuga David was described by U.S. federal prosecutors as the cartel's "supreme leader" and “the most violent and significant” Colombian drug trafficker since Pablo Escobar.[70]

Armed strikes[edit]

On January 5, 2012, the organization launched an armed strike in much of northern Colombia to protest the killing of their leader 'Giovanni'. The strike completely paralyzed several Colombian departments as shopkeepers and travellers were told to stay at home or face 'consequences'.[71]

In 2012 the Gulf Clan also got into conflict with The Office of Envigado over the drug trade in Medellín.[72]

In 2017 the Gulf Clan began a "pistol plan" against the police officers because one of their leaders was killed.[73]

In April and May of 2022, the Gulf Clan held an armed strike in much of rural Northern Colombia after their leader Dairo Antonio Úsuga was extradited to the United States.[74]

Popular culture and coverage[edit]

The Clan del Golfo has, as of recently, been featured and discussed in several documentary programs such as the series by Vice titled Criminal Planet (2021) as well as the British television program called Cocaine: Living with the Cartels (2019).

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Macías, Javier Alexánder (August 24, 2019). ""Cuarentano", amo y señor de las rutas de coca del Clan del Golfo". www.elcolombiano.com.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Autoridades en Colombia no dan respiro a la cúpula de los Urabeños". August 31, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c "Arrested: Illegal quarantine party reveals Colombian druglord's hideout". today.rtl.lu.
  4. ^ a b c "El hermano de alias Giovany es el nuevo jefe de los Urabeños". canalrcnmsn.com. Archived from the original on 7 March 2013. Retrieved 7 January 2012.
  5. ^ "USA: Kolumbianischer Drogenboss zu 45 Jahren Haft verurteilt". tagesschau.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-08-08.
  6. ^ "Urabeños". Insightcrime.org. Archived from the original on 2014-08-28. Retrieved 2012-02-10.
  7. ^ "The Gulf Clan the new generation of narcos of Colombia (Spanish)". CNN. 2017-05-23. Retrieved 2017-09-01.
  8. ^ a b c "The Albanian Mafia's International Cocaine Empire". Criminal Planet: The Albanian Mafia’s International Cocaine Empire. Vice TV. May 11, 2021. Retrieved July 25, 2021.
  9. ^ "'Los Urabeños' declaran la guerra a 'Los Rastrojos' | Colombia". Vanguardia.com. 27 September 2011. Retrieved 2012-02-10.
  10. ^ "Incautan una tonelada de cocaína de Los Urabeños en La Guajira". El Colombiano. 17 September 2011. Retrieved 2012-02-10.
  11. ^ "Urabeños". Colombia Reports. Retrieved 2016-06-08.[permanent dead link]
  12. ^ "Urabeños - Gulf Clan". InSight Crime. 2021-10-24. Retrieved 2021-11-09.
  13. ^ RedacciĂłn Judicial (2022-02-15). "Excomandante de las Fuerzas Militares serÄa parte de tentĂĄculo del Clan del golfo" (in Spanish). El Espectador. Retrieved 2022-08-10.
  14. ^ "Coronel (r) GonzĂĄlez del RÄo, a prisiĂłn mientras es investigado por nexo con “narcosâ€?" (in Spanish). El Espectador. 2022-02-15. Retrieved 2022-08-10.
  15. ^ "Urabeños". Colombia Reports. Retrieved 2012-09-17.[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ Pelcastre, Julieta (12 May 2021). "Mexican Narcotrafficking Cartels Expand their Control in Colombia". Diálogo Americas. Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  17. ^ a b c d e "Clan del Golfo ya tendría nuevo jefe en la región Caribe". seguimiento.co.
  18. ^ a b Medellín, Caracol Radio (June 27, 2020). "Disidencias despliegan "comando antiparamilitar" en el norte de Antioquia". Caracol Radio.
  19. ^ a b "Why Colombia's militarised police need reform". The Economist. September 19, 2020. Retrieved October 16, 2020.
  20. ^ "Colombia's most wanted drug lord Otoniel captured". BBC News. October 24, 2021. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
  21. ^ "Colombia authorities capture country's most wanted drug trafficker". Leader Telegram. October 23, 2021. Archived from the original on October 25, 2021. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
  22. ^ "Autodefensas Gaitanistas y guilas Negras retoman espacios dejados por Auc". Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  23. ^ "Alarma por rearme paramilitar en el país". ElEspectador. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  24. ^ "Santos ofrece $2.000 millones por 'Otoniel' de los Urabeños". Terra. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  25. ^ "Dario Antonio Usuga David". U.S. Department of State. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  26. ^ "Colombia Urabenos 'drug gang leader' shot by police". BBC News. January 2, 2012.
  27. ^ "Colombia announces capture of leader of major drug cartel". New York Times. October 23, 2021.
  28. ^ Colombia.com, Redacción- (2018-04-09). "¿Quién fue Jorge Eliécer Gaitán para Colombia?". Colombia.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-04-27.
  29. ^ JDR (2014-07-17). "La prensa de los 'Urabeños'". VerdadAbierta.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-04-27.
  30. ^ "The Urabeños After Otoniel - What Becomes of Colombia's Largest Criminal Threat?". InSight Crime. 2021-11-01. Retrieved 2021-11-11.
  31. ^ a b c "Urabeños". January 6, 2013.
  32. ^ a b Joshua Goodman, Associated Press (2017-09-01). "Colombian Police Kill Top Drug-Trafficking Fugitive". NY Times. Retrieved 1 September 2017.
  33. ^ "The Colombian Army Killed a Notorious Drug Trafficker - Novinite.com - Sofia News Agency". Novinite.com. 2017-09-01. Retrieved 2017-11-09.
  34. ^ "Second-in-Command of Colombia's Urabeños Killed in Security Operation". September 1, 2017.
  35. ^ "Alias "Inglaterra", cabecilla de "los Urabeños", estaría herido tras operativo". www.elcolombiano.com. August 30, 2017.
  36. ^ "Colombia Neutralizes Third Leader of the Gulf Clan | Diálogo Americas". 20 April 2018.
  37. ^ "Colombia Authorities 'Narrow In' on Urabeños Leader With Latest Arrest". May 22, 2018.
  38. ^ Espectador, El. "ELESPECTADOR.COM". ELESPECTADOR.COM.
  39. ^ "The Steady Downfall of Colombia's Most Powerful Drug Organization". October 5, 2018.
  40. ^ a b c "Brother of Colombia's most-wanted paramilitary chief arrested: Duque". August 23, 2019.
  41. ^ a b c d e f Dussán/Diálogo, Yolima (7 May 2021). "Colombia Strikes Clan del Golfo Structures | Diálogo Americas".
  42. ^ Nación, Dirección de Comunicaciones Fiscalía General de la (June 4, 2019). "Cae consorcio criminal que servía de enlace entre los narcotraficantes colombianos, la mafia italiana y los carteles mexicanos".
  43. ^ Kowalick, Claire. "Alleged Colombian drug trafficker extradited to Houston". Times Record News.
  44. ^ a b c d Tiempo, Casa Editorial El (March 21, 2020). "'Marihuano', el capo que entró a la lista de los más buscados". El Tiempo.
  45. ^ "Google Translate". translate.google.com.
  46. ^ Radio, Caracol (April 26, 2020). "En Cereté capturan a alias Tavo, uno de los narcos más buscados del país". Caracol Radio.
  47. ^ a b Radio, Caracol (May 4, 2020). "Judicializado alias Dávinson, presunto cabecilla del Clan del Golfo". Caracol Radio.
  48. ^ Bonilla, Karol. "The alleged ringleader of 'Clan del Golfo' who is accused of promoting violent confrontations with other criminal structures has been brought before justice | Fiscalia General de la Nacion".
  49. ^ "Capturan a 'Davinson', principal cabecilla de una subestructura del Clan del Golfo". Canal 1. May 3, 2020.
  50. ^ "Ejército capturó en Antioquia a ocho integrantes del Clan del Golfo". Semana.com Últimas Noticias de Colombia y el Mundo. May 27, 2020.
  51. ^ Medellín, Caracol Radio (May 29, 2020). "A la cárcel integrante de Clan del Golfo que tenía 9000 cartuchos de fusil". Caracol Radio.
  52. ^ Heraldo, El. "Mandan a la cárcel a alias 'Yeisito', supuesto sicario del Clan del Golfo". EL HERALDO.
  53. ^ "Cae el más buscado del Clan del Golfo en Soledad, alias Yeisito". 28 May 2020.
  54. ^ "Ejército neutralizó accionar armado de Clan del Golfo en Chocó | Radio Nacional". www.radionacional.co.
  55. ^ a b Paisa, Alerta (June 12, 2020). "Cayó alias "Perea" presunto integrante del Clan del Golfo en el Urabá antioqueño". www.alertapaisa.com.
  56. ^ a b c "25 capturados en operaciones contra el Clan del Golfo en Santa Marta". seguimiento.co.
  57. ^ a b c d e de 2020, 8 de Octubre. "Capturan a 13 integrantes del Clan del Golfo en Cartagena". infobae.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  58. ^ a b "STL.News". STL.News.
  59. ^ "Abatido alias "La Liendra" presunto integrante del Clan del Golfo". October 14, 2020.
  60. ^ a b Radio, Caracol (October 16, 2020). "Policía Nacional capturó a cabecilla de subestructura del Clan del Golfo". Caracol Radio.
  61. ^ a b c "Combined Panama-Colombia operation $70 million drug haul". menafn.com.
  62. ^ "Detuvieron a "Plástico", presunto financiero y coordinador de rutas del Clan del Golfo". Infobae (in Spanish). 2020-11-18.
  63. ^ a b "Presidencia de la republica". idm.presidencia.gov.co.
  64. ^ a b c "Colombia Captures 181 Clan del Golfo Members | Diálogo Americas". 8 March 2021.
  65. ^ "Treasury Sanctions Network for Assisting Colombia's Clan del Golfo Drug Trafficking Organization | U.S. Department of the Treasury". home.treasury.gov.
  66. ^ "Colombia Arrests 198 Suspected Clan del Golfo Members".
  67. ^ "Video: Líder de la mayor banda criminal de Colombia fue detenido en su boda". EnCancha.mx. August 19, 2021. Retrieved October 25, 2021.
  68. ^ "Siopas, segundo al mando en el Clan del Golfo, habría sido asesinado por sus propios hombres en un ajuste de cuentas". infobae (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2023-03-05.
  69. ^ "Gulf Clan: Colombia suspends ceasefire with drug cartel". BBC. Retrieved 2023-03-20.
  70. ^ Zraick, Karen (8 August 2023). "45-Year Sentence for Otoniel, Who Ran a Colombian Drug Cartel". New York Times. Retrieved 8 August 2023.
  71. ^ "Colombian government in all-out war against drug gang - latimes.com". Latimesblogs.latimes.com. 2012-01-07. Retrieved 2012-02-10.
  72. ^ ToMuse (2012-04-10). "New drug gang wars blow Colombian city's revival apart". the Guardian. London. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  73. ^ news4europe (2017-05-15). "Boss of northwest Colombia drug gang nabbed". news4europe. Retrieved 14 June 2017.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  74. ^ "Cartel shuts down much of Colombia over leader's extradition to U.S." Retrieved 2023-08-08.