Friday, March 20, 2026

DOJ moves to prosecute president of Colombia — a vocal Trump critic

Nicole Charky-Chami
March 20, 2026 
RAW STORY

Colombian President Gustavo Petro speaks during a press conference after casting his vote in congressional elections and party primaries for presidential candidate, in Bogota, Colombia on March 8, 2026. REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez

The Justice Department has launched an investigation into Colombian President Gustavo Petro, purportedly over his alleged ties to drug traffickers, The New York Times reported on Friday.

The U.S. attorney's offices in Manhattan and Brooklyn are investigating Petro, an adversary of President Donald Trump, and have included agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration and Homeland Security Investigations, three sources told The Times. The prosecutors leading the investigation have previously worked on international narcotics trafficking cases.

Investigators were in the early stages of examining whether Petro had met with drug traffickers and if he had received campaign donations from them, according to the anonymous sources who said they could not disclose the information surrounding the active investigations


It's unclear if the separate investigations will result in criminal charges.

"There was nothing to indicate that the White House had a role in initiating either investigation," The Times reported.

Trump could attempt to influence Colombia's presidential elections this May, although Petro, who is the country's first left-wing leader, is limited to serving one term.

"But Mr. Trump, who has frequently wielded criminal inquiries as a cudgel against his rivals and enemies, has harshly criticized Mr. Petro, calling him a 'sick man,'" according to The Times. "And he could use the investigations as leverage in seeking more cooperation from Colombia, which is both the world’s top producer of cocaine and one of America’s most crucial allies in cracking down on narco-terrorism in the region."

After Dropping ‘Made-Up’ Allegation Against Maduro, DOJ Now Reportedly Probing Colombia’s Petro

“This is what they did before they abducted Maduro,” said one observer.



Colombian President Gustavo Petro speaks during a press conference at the Colombian Embassy in Washington, DC, on February 3, 2026.
(Photo by Oliver Contreras/AFP via Getty Images)


Brett Wilkins
Mar 20, 2026
COMMON DREAMS

The US Department of Justice has reportedly launched multiple drug trafficking investigations into Colombian President Gustavo Petro—a leftist and staunch critic of President Donald Trump—just over two months after dropping a key yet fictitious allegation against Venezuela’s kidnapped leader.

“Three people with knowledge of the matter” told The New York Times on Friday that the US Attorney’s offices in Manhattan and Brooklyn are conducting the investigations in concert with “prosecutors who focus on international narcotics trafficking,” the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI).

Investigators are reportedly probing whether Petro met with any drug traffickers or if his presidential campaign solicited donations from them. The sources told the Times that the probes are in their early states and it is unclear whether any criminal charges would be filed.

The Times noted that “there was nothing to indicate that the White House had a role in initiating either investigation.”




However, Trump has shown exceptional zeal for weaponizing the government to target his political foes and has repeatedly accused Petro—who has been a vocal critic of US imperialism, high-seas boat bombings, and support for Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza—of being a drug trafficker.

Trump has offered no evidence to support his allegations against Petro. The US, on the other hand, has a centuries-long history of involvement in drug trafficking, from China to Southeast Asia to Central America—and Colombia, where the CIA allegedly worked with the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC), a far-right paramilitary group founded by drug lords to combat leftist insurgents during the country’s decadeslong civil war.

As a sitting head of state, Petro has immunity from US jurisdiction while in office. But that did not stop Trump from bombing and invading Venezuela to abduct President Nicolás Maduro to the United States. The DOJ charged Venezuela’s president with narco-terrorism conspiracy, conspiracy to import cocaine into the United States, and possession of machine guns and destructive devices.

The DOJ has quietly dropped its “made-up” allegation against Maduro—that he was the kingpin of the “Cartel de los Soles”—after learning that the name is a slang phrase and not an actual criminal group.

After kidnapping Maduro, Trump told Petro to “watch his ass.”

Last October, the US Treasury Department sanctioned Petro and his wife, with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent saying at the time that Colombia’s leader “has allowed drug cartels to flourish and refused to stop this activity.”

This, after the US State Department revoked Petro’s visa after he used his September 2025 United Nations General Assembly address to accuse Trump of complicity in the Gaza genocide and urged the UN to open a criminal case against the US leader for his extrajudicial bombing of boats allegedly transporting drugs from South America to the United States. Petro also implored US troops to “not point your rifles against humanity.”

Some observers say Trump may try to leverage the probe of Petro to pressure him into greater cooperation with the failed but ongoing 55-year War on Drugs. Colombia is the world’s leading cocaine producer whose previous right-wing governments were staunch US allies during and after the Cold War.

According to the Times:
At the same time, Colombian news outlets have reported that people linked to traffickers have tried to channel funds to Mr. Petro, including through his son. His son admitted that illicit money entered his father’s 2022 election campaign, Colombian prosecutors said, but they have not brought criminal charges against Mr. Petro himself. He has denied wrongdoing, describing the accusations as politically motivated.

Others speculate that Trump may be trying to put his finger on the scale of Colombia’s May 31 election. As Colombia’s Constitution limits presidents to a single term, Petro has urged his supporters to vote for leftist Sen. Iván Cepeda. Trump has forged close ties with right-wing governments across Latin America, recently hosting his Shield of the America’s summit in Miami and meddling in elections from Honduras to Chile to Argentina.

Relations between Trump and Petro seemed to have been improving. When Petro visited the White House last month for his first face-to-face meeting with Trump, many observers braced themselves for fireworks. However, Trump emerged from the meeting calling it “terrific.” He even signed a copy of his ghostwritten book, The Art of the Deal, for Petro, writing, “You are great” on the title page.

Petro, in turn, posted a photo Trump gifted him of the two men shaking hands, and a handwritten message saying, “Gustavo: A great honor—I love Colombia.”

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