Pubdate: Thu, 14 Nov 2002 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2002 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Tim Johnson, Mercury News Washington Bureau COLOMBIAN REBELS CHARGED U.S. Targets Leaders Of Leftist Guerrillas WASHINGTON - Attorney General John Ashcroft on Wednesday announced a new round of criminal charges against Colombia's largest outlaw army, indicting the group's No. 2 leader and other left-wing rebels for drug trafficking and the kidnapping of two American citizens. The charges marked the latest sign that the Bush administration is extending the reach of U.S. justice to combat outlaw groups in the embattled Latin American nation and stepping up support for Colombia President Alvaro Uribe Velez. Ashcroft said authorities would hunt the indicted combatants from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, including No. 2 leader Jorge Briceno Suarez, "as long as it takes . . . no matter where they hide." In the past two weeks, U.S. prosecutors have broken up an arms-for-cocaine scheme allegedly run by Colombia's right-wing paramilitary army and smashed a kidnapping ring. Earlier in the year, other left-wing guerrillas, arms merchants and the nation's top paramilitary chief were indicted for crimes allegedly committed in or against the United States. The target of Wednesday's action is a rebel army, known by its Spanish initials as the FARC, deeply enmeshed in the narcotics trade. It now has some 18,000 combatants. Briceno Suarez, a burly, beret-clad commander, and two lower-ranking rebels of the FARC were charged with kidnapping U.S. citizens Jerel Shaffer and Earl Goen from a fishing camp in western Venezuela in 1997. Rebels took Shaffer to Colombian territory, and held him for nine months until a $1 million ransom was paid. "If convicted on all counts, the defendants face the maximum penalty of death," Ashcroft said. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager