Diskussion:Cali-Kartell

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Überschrift[Quelltext bearbeiten]

Ist das so besser?

Über das Cali-Kartell und seine ausgefeilte Vertriebsstruktur gibt es so viel zu sagen, in der englischen Wikipedia gibt es einen großartigen Artikel. Wenn ich wieder Zeit habe, dann werde ich einiges dazu schreiben, Gruss, Graf zu Pappenheim 06:49, 2. Apr. 2008 (CEST)[Beantworten]

Wie kann man eigentlich die Fotos und das Schaubild aus der englischen Wikipedia übernehmen, weiß das jemand? Graf zu Pappenheim 06:51, 2. Apr. 2008 (CEST)[Beantworten]

So, done. Ich habe mir die Mühe gemacht den Artikel von der englischen Wikipedia ins Deutsche zu übersetzen. Der Schaukasten mit den Führungspersonen ist mir leider nicht gelungen und auch nicht die Übertragung der Bilder aus der angelsächsischen Wikipedia. Könnte vielleicht jemand von Euch das übernehmen, vielen, vielen herzlichen Dank, Gruss Graf zu Pappenheim 15:41, 13. Apr. 2008 (CEST)[Beantworten]

Hier noch ein wichtiger Artikel aber ich kann einfach nicht mehr übersetzen, ächz:

Department of Justice Cali Cartel Leaders Plead Guilty to Drug and Money Laundering Conspiracy Charges Rodriguez-Orejuela Brothers, Other Family Members Agree to $2.1 Billion in Forfeiture

WASHINGTON Miguel and Gilberto Rodriguez-Orejuela, brothers who ran the infamous Cali Cartel in Colombia that was responsible for importing tons of cocaine into the United States over the last two decades, have pleaded guilty to a charge of conspiracy to import cocaine into the United States and have agreed to plead guilty to conspiracy to commit money laundering by hiding the proceeds of narcotics trafficking, the Department of Justice announced today.

The guilty pleas by the Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers were entered today before Judge Federico A. Moreno, in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida. Under the terms of a plea agreement with the U.S. government, the Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers each pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to import five kilograms or more of cocaine, as charged in an indictment from the Southern District of Florida, and agreed to plead guilty in Miami at a later date to one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering, as charged in an indictment in the Southern District of New York.

Under the terms of the plea deal, the Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers have agreed to the entry of a final judgment of forfeiture in the amount of $2.1 billion to be levied against their narcotics-related assets and businesses found anywhere in the world. That would include any narcotics-funded assets put in the names of family members to thwart forfeiture.

Miguel and Gilberto Rodriguez-Orejuela, 62 and 67 years old, respectively, were sentenced by Judge Moreno to 30 years in prison based on their illegal conduct after 1997, when Colombia lifted the seven-year-long prohibition against extraditing its nationals. The agreement also calls for the United States to recommend to the court that the sentence on the New York charge run concurrently to this sentence.

These guilty pleas deal a final and fatal blow to the Cali Cartel, a violent drug trafficking organization that once operated outside of the law, said Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales. But as drug traffickers and kingpins around the world now know, they are not beyond the reach of justice in the United States the Cali Cartel has been dismantled and the brothers now face years in American prisons. Their arrests, extradition to the United States and now their convictions were all made possible by extraordinary cooperation from the Colombian government, our valued partner in the fight to eradicate narcotics trafficking and the violence that so often accompanies it.

The Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers were leaders of the Cali Cartel, a narcotics trafficking organization based in Cali, Colombia that for many years was the largest supplier of cocaine to the United States, responsible for sending more than 200 tons of cocaine to this country. The Cartel was a sophisticated criminal enterprise handling all aspects of the cocaine trade, including production, transportation, wholesale distribution and money laundering. At the height of its reign, the Cartel used violence to terrorize would-be competitors and potential witnesses and relied upon corruption to influence and gain control of many Colombian institutions.

The four leaders of the Cali Cartel Miguel Rodriguez Orejuela, Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela, Helmer Herrera Buitrago, and Jose Santacruz Londono were named in the Annex to Executive Order 12978 (Specially Designated Narcotics Traffickers) which was signed by President Clinton on Oct. 21, 1995 to utilize economic sanctions authorities under the International Emergency Economic Power Act (IEEPA) to attack the financial empires built by the Cali Cartel. The Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) investigated and subsequently designated hundreds of front companies and individuals in Colombia and ten other countries since October 1995 to OFACs list of Specially Designated Narcotics Traffickers list. OFACs actions to apply economic sanctions gravely affected the Cali Cartels ability to use many of the financial assets they derived from their narcotics trafficking activities.

After Colombia lifted its ban on the extradition of nationals in 1997, U.S. law enforcement and their Colombian counterparts continued to investigate the Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers, resulting in the criminal charges in Miami and New York. Then in December 2004, Gilberto Rodriguez-Orejuela was extradited from Colombia, and Miguel was extradited in March 2005 to face prosecution on those charges.

In pleading guilty to the charge in the Miami indictment, the Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers admitted that they imported five kilograms or more of cocaine into the United States, beginning in or about 1990 and continuing until in or about July 2002. Specifically, the brothers were responsible for the importation of over 200,000 kilograms of cocaine from Colombia that was smuggled into the United States through Central America. The Cali Cartel used a variety of methods to smuggle the cocaine into the country, including: the concealment of the drug in shipments of concrete posts sent from Colombia to Venezuela and eventually South Florida; the concealment of cocaine in shipments of ceramic tiles sent from Colombia to Panama to Guatemala, where the cocaine was removed from the tile, repackaged in boxes of frozen vegetables and then shipped to South Florida; and the concealment of cocaine in shipments of coffee from Colombia to Panama, and then South Florida. Although the defendants were imprisoned by Colombia in 1995, they continued to run the Cali Cartel from prison by working through Miguels son, William Rodriguez-Abadia, and others who oversaw various aspects of the cartel using new routes and new methods such as the hiding of cocaine in shipments of empty chlorine gas cylinders and, later, the placement of cocaine in containers of pumpkins for surreptitious removal by co-conspirators working at the Port of Miami. On March 8, 2006, William Rodriguez-Abadia pleaded guilty in Miami to his involvement in this drug trafficking conspiracy and was sentenced to more than 21 years in prison.

The Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers agreed to plead guilty to a money laundering conspiracy charged in the Southern District of New York that alleged that they laundered the illicit fortune of the Cali Cartel through a pharmaceutical drug empire that included more than 400 retail drug stores across Colombia and pharmaceutical drug laboratories that manufactured the drugs. By investing millions of dollars in cocaine-trafficking proceeds into these ostensibly legitimate companies which included Drogas La Rebaja and Laboratorios Kressfor the Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers laundered millions of dollars in Cali Cartel cocaine proceeds.

In addition to the agreements entered by the brothers, 28 family members of the Rodriguez-Orejuelas entered into an agreement with the United States today. Under the terms of that separate agreement, the family members agreed to forfeit their right, title, and interest in all Rodriguez-Orejuela business entities and other assets worldwide, as well as all assets of any nature in the United States. Once they have taken all steps to relinquish any claims to these properties, the family members will be eligible to be removed from OFACs list of persons designated as Specially Designated Narcotics Traffickers. They will be required to continue to assist the U.S. and Colombian governments in any ongoing or later related forfeiture actions. The U.S. government has agreed not to prosecute six of the relatives who, although not involved in narcotics trafficking, could be prosecuted for related crimes.

The convictions of the Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers result from Operation Cornerstone, an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) investigation led by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) that began in August 1991 with the discovery of more than 12,000 kilograms of cocaine at the port of Miami hidden inside a cargo of cement posts imported from South America. Subsequent investigation led to the arrest of several individuals and provided evidence that the Cali Cartel had become the greatest drug trafficking threat to the United States, eclipsing the dying Medellin Cartel. Operation Cornerstone yielded several major seizures of cocaine, including the cocaine hidden in products shipped from Central America. Since it began, Operation Cornerstone has led to the conviction of 105 defendants, the seizure of 47,500 kilograms of cocaine, and documentation through seized records and witness testimony of 200,000 kilos of cocaine being smuggled into the United States, representing $2.1 billion in drug proceeds, all related to the Miami drug prosecution.

At one time, the Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers oversaw one of the worlds most powerful criminal organizations, believed to be responsible for roughly 80 percent of the cocaine supplied to the United States. They were also behind a reign of terror and corruption that impacted governments and people across the globe. Today, these brothers rank as arguably the highest-level trafficking figures to ever occupy U.S. jail cells. Their guilty pleas mark the culmination of 15 years of investigation by ICE agents, DEA agents and Colombian authorities,� said Julie Myers, Assistant Secretary for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

The founding brothers of Colombias notorious Cali Cartel once cornered the worlds cocaine market and smuggled it to the United States on a colossal scale, said Drug Enforcement Administrator Karen P. Tandy. Now, after todays conviction, the Cali Cartel will be reduced to extinction with its members in American prison, like the common criminals they are, stripped of all the wealth, power and influence they once possessed.�

�As with many criminal organizations, the vulnerability of the Rodriguez-Orejuela family has been its finances. By relentlessly uncovering and immobilizing the hidden assets of the Cali cartel, the Office of Foreign Assets Control and our law enforcement colleagues incapacitated a once-powerful drug organization and helped to deliver the guilty pleas and forfeitures being announced today," said Adam Szubin, Director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control.

John Walters, Director of National Drug Control Policy, said, �This success is a global success because narco-terrorism knows no boundaries. President Uribe and the men and women of the Colombian Security Forces are to be commended for their courage and dedication to justice in arresting and extraditing the Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers. We must continue to support Colombia and the Colombian people's strong resolve to destroy the illegal drug industry.�

�The hard work and perseverance of the federal prosecutors and agents of Operation Cornerstone has led to the unparalleled conviction of more than 100 defendants, the forfeiture of over $2 billion and the seizure of nearly 50,000 kilos of cocaine being smuggled into the United States. Today, their work, and the work and their colleagues at the Office of Foreign Assets Control, resulted in the guilty pleas of the Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers. Infamous as the leaders of the Cali Drug Cartel, the 30-year prison sentence of the Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers ends the Cali chapter of the war on drugs,� said U.S. Attorney R. Alexander Acosta of the Southern District of Florida.

�The Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers masterminded a narcotics-trafficking business that generated an illicit billion-dollar fortune � a business they propagated throughout the Americas by repeatedly reorganizing their corporations to conceal their interest,� stated Michael J. Garcia, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York. �This case is a testament to our strong partnership with Colombian law enforcement. The powerhouse once known as the Cali Cartel has been effectively bankrupted, and the vast amounts of illegal money derived from their drug trade can now be recouped. We�re committed to identifying and exposing the money laundering networks of the world�s largest narcotics-trafficking organizations and bringing them to justice in the United States.�

The prosecutions of the Rodriguez-Orejuela brothers in Miami were handled by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Ed Ryan, Richard Gregorie, Matthew Axelrod, Lisa Hirsch, Alison Lehr and Laurence Bardfeld at the U.S. Attorney�s Office in the Southern District of Florida. The Southern District of New York case was the result of the two-year Operation Dynasty led by the U.S. Attorney�s Office, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and OFAC. The case was handled by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Boyd M. Johnson III, Kevin R. Puvalowski, and Glen G. McGorty. Assistance to both OCDETF cases was provided by the Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section of the Criminal Division the Department of Justice. The cases were investigated by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement at the Department of Homeland Security and the DEA. Assistance in the investigation was provided by the U.S. Marshals Service, South Florida High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) task force, the Office of White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, the Colombian Police and the Colombian Fiscalia (the Office of the Prosecutor General).

Soziale Säuberungen[Quelltext bearbeiten]

Der Abschnitt wirkt momentan ein wenig aus dem Kontext gerissen. Welche Motivation haben Drogenhändler, willkürlich Personen umzubringen, die weder als Konkurrenten noch als Strafverfolger in Frage kommen? Da sollten die Hintergründe besser herausgearbeitet werden. --Zinnmann d 10:54, 10. Mär. 2010 (CET)[Beantworten]

Die "sozialen Säuberungen" wurden von der Polizei oder von Polizisten in Zivil durchgeführt. Todesschwadronen mit vermummten Personen. Die Polizei in Cali stand lange Zeit unter dem inoffiziellen Befehl des Cali-Kartells. Als Beleg habe ich folgendes gefunden: "Las causas de los homicidios en Cali han variado a través del tiempo. Entre 1983 y 1985 la guerrilla del M-19 fue la mayor responsable de asesinatos. Después la llamada "limpieza social" estuvo detrás de los crímenes. Entre 1989 y 1994 el cartel del Cali aparece como el principal responsable. Y como se dijo anteriormente, el análisis del Observatorio señala al narcotráfico como la principal causa de los homicidios en la dinámica reciente de la violencia en la capital del Valle." in http://www.acnur.org/index.php?id_pag=5158. Oder auch in http://books.google.de/books?id=SqsFmny9GOgC&pg=PA58&lpg=PA58&dq=cali+cartel+limpieza+social&source=bl&ots=p9D1E8DhNa&sig=xRpwIYMWPQ0YBjmsLAs5FgJ8UZU&hl=de&ei=mJCXS5q8MIH6_AbD57jWCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CBoQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=cali%20cartel%20limpieza%20social&f=false oder Escuadrón Limpieza in http://www.cidh.org/countryrep/colombia93eng/chap.2.htm
Die Querverbindung ist jedoch nicht eindeutig dargelegt, da gebe ich Dir vollkommen recht. Gruss, --Graf zu Pappenheim 13:25, 10. Mär. 2010 (CET)[Beantworten]

Review: Juli 2010[Quelltext bearbeiten]

Das Cali-Kartell (span. Cartel de Cali) war ein Zusammenschluss verschiedener kolumbianischer Kokainproduzenten und -schmuggler in der Stadt Cali.

Ist in meinen Augen schon ein sehr guter Artikel wobei es sicher noch ein paar Mängen gibt. -- Generator 12:22, 14. Jul. 2010 (CEST)[Beantworten]

In dem Schlusskapitel stimmt etwas nicht: Die Brüder verpflichteten sich, 2,1 Mrd. USD in Vermögensgegenstände zu investieren. Die korrekte Fassung steht wahrscheinlich in dem längeren englischen Text auf der Diskussionsseite, den der Autor nicht mehr übersetzen mochte. Es soll wohl heissen, das Sachwerte bis in diese Höhe weltweit auch von Familienmitgliedern beschlagnahmt werden können, so lange dies in Zusammenhang mit den Drogenverdiensten steht.--Claude J 10:33, 19. Jul. 2010 (CEST)[Beantworten]

Habe die Passage korrigiert. Generator 12:53, 20. Jul. 2010 (CEST)[Beantworten]

Ich habe auf Wikipedia:WikiProjekt Ereignisse/Faktencheck‎#Cali-Kartell mal nachgefragt was „Los Chemas“ eigentlich genau bedeutet. Wer es beantworten kann bekommt einen Punkt. Generator 11:50, 28. Jan. 2011 (CET)[Beantworten]

KALP vom 27. Januar bis 12. Februar 2011: keine Auszeichnung[Quelltext bearbeiten]

Das Cali-Kartell (span. Cartel de Cali) war ein Zusammenschluss verschiedener kolumbianischer Kokainproduzenten und -schmuggler in der Stadt Cali. Es wurde von Gilberto Rodríguez Orejuela, seinem Bruder Miguel und José Santacruz Londoño in den 1970er Jahren gegründet und kontrollierte auf dem Höhepunkt seiner Macht 80 Prozent der kolumbianischen Kokainexporte in die Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika.

Ich finde den Artikel Lesenswert. Der Artikel hat ein Review Diskussion:Cali-Kartell#Review: Juli 2010 hinter sich, das leider nicht besonders ergiebig war. Ob Auszeichnung oder nicht: Ich erhoffe mir, obwohl nicht der Hauptautor, Rückmeldungen, die ich versuche mittelfristig umzusetzen. Generator 16:03, 27. Jan. 2011 (CET)[Beantworten]

Mir ist Folgendes aufgefallen:

  • Im hiesigen Artikel heißt es sinngemäß, das Cali-Kartell habe eine unabhängige Zellenstruktur gehabt, es sei eine Dachgruppe voneinander unabhängiger krimineller Gruppen gewesen – im Gegensatz zum "dominanten" Medellin-Kartell unter der "streng hierarchischen Leitungsfunktion eines Pablo Escobar". Im Artikel Medellin-Kartell steht es eher anders: Das Medellin-Kartell habe "eher den Charakter einzelner, nebeneinander agierender illegaler Unternehmen als den einer straff geführten, kriminellen Organisation wie zum Beispiel der sizilianischen Mafia" gehabt, es habe sich um "unabhängige Organisationen, welche miteinander kooperierten" gehandelt. Was stimmt?
  • Der Artikel nimmt sehr stark Bezug auf das Medellin-Kartell. Das mag im Abschnitt Organisation noch nachvollziehbar sein. Aber ein Vergleich mit dem Medellin-Kartell findet fast in jedem Abschnitt statt.
  • Mehrere Begriffe wie Medellin-Kartell oder Pablo Escobar sind mehrfach verlinkt.
  • Was ist diversifizieren, was ist ein Heroindistributionszentrum?
  • Was bedeutet der "makabere Name" Cali limpia, Cali linda?
  • Was bedeutet Muerte a Secuestradores bzw. Muerte a los Secuestradores (MAS) (auch noch in zwei unterschiedlichen Schreibweisen) und was FARC?
  • Einzelnachweise, die nur aus http-Anschriften bestehen, sind unterdurchschnittlich. Standard ist, dass in den http-Link hineingeschrieben wird, um welche Art Link es sich handelt sowie Name und Bezeichnung der Seite, auf die der Link führt.

Wenn ich ein Votum abgeben sollte, dann: Abwartend mit Luft nach oben. --Pincerno 00:47, 28. Jan. 2011 (CET)[Beantworten]

ok...danke erstmal für die Rückmeldung.

  • Das mit der Zellenstruktur werde ich versuchen zu klären
  • Nachdem die beiden Kartelle einen regelrechten Krieg gegeneinander geführt haben läßt sich das schwer vermeiden. Wo genau findest du denn, ist zuviel von Medellin?
  • Die doppelten wikilinks zu Pablo und des Medellinkartell hab ich entfernt.
  • diversifizieren bedeutet auffächern, Kräfte verteilen usw. und ein Distributionszentrum ist ein Verteilerzentrum. IMHO eigentlich gebräuchliche Wörter. Soll ich sie austauschen?
  • Cali limpia, Cali linda=Sauberes Cali, schönes Cali hab ich so in den Artikel geschrieben.
  • Muerte a Secuestradores = Tod den Entführern (wurde in den Artikel geschrieben) (und auch nur mehr die Variante verwendet) und die FARC wurde jetzt verlinkt und mit einer Kurzbeschreibung versehen.
  • Die Links in den Einzelnachweisen nehm ich mir als nächstes vor

Generator 12:13, 28. Jan. 2011 (CET)[Beantworten]

"Zuviel Medellin":
Abschnitt Gründung:

  • beispielsweise dem rivalisierenden Medellin-Kartell
  • ähnlich wie das Medellin-Kartell

Abschnitt Organisation:

  • vom dominanten Medellin-Kartell
  • eines Pablo Escobar vom Medellin-Kartell
  • Während das Medellin-Kartell
  • Im Gegensatz zum Medellin-Kartell
  • Verglichen mit Pablo Escobars Medellín-Kartell
  • und das Medellín-Kartell zersplitterte
  • Im Gegensatz zum Medellín-Kartell

Abschnitt Aktivitäten:
Finanzen:

  • die auch vom Medellin-Kartell

Bestechung:

  • Im Kontrast zum Medellin-Kartell
  • Terrorismus des Medellin-Kartells

Soziale Säuberungen:

  • Das Medellin-Kartell operierte

Vergeltungsmaßnahmen:

  • gründeten das Medellin- und das Cali-Kartell
  • Terrorkrieges des Medellin-Kartells

Abschnitt Beziehung zum Medellin-Kartell:
First InterAmericas Bank:

  • Finanzier des Medellin-Kartells
  • vom Medellin- und Cali-Kartell

MAS Muerte a Secuestradores:

  • zwischen Medellin- und Cali-Kartell
  • und das Medellin-Kartell in Süd-Florida
  • und das Medellin-Kartell vermutete
  • Rodriguez Gacha vom Medellin-Kartell

Los Pepes:

  • Staat gegen das Medellin-Kartell
  • Das Medellin-Kartell wurde
  • Zerschlagung des Medellin-Kartells
  • mit dem Medellin-Kartell zu kooperieren
  • löste sich das Medellin-Kartell auf

Die Begriffe diversifizieren und Heroindistributionszentren würde ich ersetzen. Gruß --Pincerno 22:08, 1. Feb. 2011 (CET)[Beantworten]

Danke erstmal. Werde versuchen das Medellin-kartell etwas zu eliminieren. Generator 12:42, 2. Feb. 2011 (CET)[Beantworten]

hat nicht genuegend Unterstuetzer fuer eine Auszeichnung erhalten. schomynv 02:39, 12. Feb. 2011 (CET)[Beantworten]


Hier habe ich einen Link von einem Artikel den man einbauen kann/muss der die Toten des Bürgerkrieges in Cali veranschaulicht. hier. Insgesamt sind zwischen 2001 und 2015 (also total aktuell) 26.687 Menschen umgebracht worden. 37.49.26.19 19:36, 27. Nov. 2016 (CET)[Beantworten]