Post by soyeb19 on Feb 18, 2024 4:27:33 GMT -5
Nancy lost almost everything, although she has not yet recovered from the aftermath and knows that she is threatened, she has decided that she will no longer remain silent. Practicing law, whether as a lawyer, judge or prosecutor in Spain has nothing to do with the way these professions are developed in certain parts of the world. In this second episode of The Anti-System Prosecutor, the price that some end up paying for doing their job in the most honest way possible, for flouting certain unwritten laws, which show the infiltration of organized crime into the power structures of the State, becomes clear.
«When we went somewhere together, I asked them (his family) to come forward because I felt like they were going to shoot me and I didn't want them to do it in front of Whatsapp Database them. My brothers realized it because they heard comments on the street. And they asked me to be careful, they told me to limit myself to doing the minimum and not get into trouble; "That a single swallow does not make it rain," says Nancy Ardila in this second episode of the podcast.
The criminal organization that Nancy manages to dismantle was not used to being questioned by anyone; much less that no one beat him. So they got back at Nancy by hitting her where it hurt her the most: her family.
«In the calls they told me that I was going to witness the death of my entire family. A man always called. "That was the way to pay for what he had done to them for having them captured ," he says.
The hitmen killed his two brothers in a matter of months and are trying to kill his father and sister. Nancy manages to look into the eyes of the person sent to kill her, although she is saved from him thanks to a tip-off. The harassment to which she is subjected and the possibility of losing her mother and her son seriously affect her health. The situation reaches such a point that the Colombian State decides to urgently evacuate them and hide them until a solution is found.
It was nine in the morning when a series of patrols arrived at my house with orders to get us out of there because they had information that they were going to murder us all. They gave us five minutes to get identification documents and some clothes; that we put on our vests and that we could not take more than two people per car. When we arrived in Buga, the intelligence service told the police that we were staying there, that they could leave now. It was just a way to get rid of them because they didn't trust them, for security's sake . "
"The attorney general at that time told me, leave Colombia, I cannot guarantee your life...you are controlled by the people of those organizations," adds Carlos Cárdenas, a Colombian justice official, who had to leave his country due to danger to his life. He is just one of the jurists involved in this three-episode podcast.
This podcast is a production of Cárabo Producciones , directed by Pablo Montes and provided for distribution to Economist&Jurist .
«When we went somewhere together, I asked them (his family) to come forward because I felt like they were going to shoot me and I didn't want them to do it in front of Whatsapp Database them. My brothers realized it because they heard comments on the street. And they asked me to be careful, they told me to limit myself to doing the minimum and not get into trouble; "That a single swallow does not make it rain," says Nancy Ardila in this second episode of the podcast.
The criminal organization that Nancy manages to dismantle was not used to being questioned by anyone; much less that no one beat him. So they got back at Nancy by hitting her where it hurt her the most: her family.
«In the calls they told me that I was going to witness the death of my entire family. A man always called. "That was the way to pay for what he had done to them for having them captured ," he says.
The hitmen killed his two brothers in a matter of months and are trying to kill his father and sister. Nancy manages to look into the eyes of the person sent to kill her, although she is saved from him thanks to a tip-off. The harassment to which she is subjected and the possibility of losing her mother and her son seriously affect her health. The situation reaches such a point that the Colombian State decides to urgently evacuate them and hide them until a solution is found.
It was nine in the morning when a series of patrols arrived at my house with orders to get us out of there because they had information that they were going to murder us all. They gave us five minutes to get identification documents and some clothes; that we put on our vests and that we could not take more than two people per car. When we arrived in Buga, the intelligence service told the police that we were staying there, that they could leave now. It was just a way to get rid of them because they didn't trust them, for security's sake . "
"The attorney general at that time told me, leave Colombia, I cannot guarantee your life...you are controlled by the people of those organizations," adds Carlos Cárdenas, a Colombian justice official, who had to leave his country due to danger to his life. He is just one of the jurists involved in this three-episode podcast.
This podcast is a production of Cárabo Producciones , directed by Pablo Montes and provided for distribution to Economist&Jurist .