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DEA Names Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro a 'Priority Target' in New York Narco‑Corruption Probe

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has designated Colombian President Gustavo Petro a 'priority target' as federal prosecutors in Brooklyn and Manhattan investigate allegations that his representatives solicited bribes from jailed drug traffickers to block their extradition to the United States and that he has ties to major cartels, according to DEA records and people familiar with the inquiry. Internal DEA documents cited by the Associated Press say Petro’s name has surfaced in multiple investigations since 2022, including confidential‑source claims about possible dealings with Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, links to the Cartel de los Soles, and alleged use of Colombian law enforcement to move cocaine and fentanyl through ports. Prosecutors have reportedly been questioning traffickers about meetings at Bogotá’s La Picota prison where Petro’s intermediaries allegedly offered protection from extradition in exchange for payments and support for his 'total peace' plan, though sources say it is not yet clear whether he is criminally implicated and the inquiries remain in early stages. Petro has publicly denied any ties to traffickers, rejected having taken their money during his campaign, and on X cast the accusations as politically motivated attacks from Colombia’s far right, while the Colombian Embassy in Washington dismissed the reports as anonymous, 'unverified' and without legal basis. The designation of a sitting Colombian president as a top DEA target is an extraordinary escalation in U.S. anti‑narcotics efforts in a country that has long been a central partner in the drug war, raising the stakes for bilateral relations, extradition policy, and U.S. efforts to stem cocaine and fentanyl flows that fuel overdoses at home.

U.S. Drug Enforcement and Cartels U.S.–Colombia Relations

📌 Key Facts

  • DEA records reviewed by AP show Colombian President Gustavo Petro has been designated a 'priority target'—a label for suspects seen as having a 'significant impact' on the drug trade.
  • Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn and Manhattan have been questioning drug traffickers about alleged Petro‑linked bribe solicitations at Bogotá’s La Picota prison to block extradition to the U.S.
  • DEA investigative records cite confidential sources alleging Petro’s possible dealings with Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, the Cartel de los Soles, and schemes using Colombian law enforcement to move cocaine and fentanyl through ports.
  • Sources told AP the inquiries are at an early stage and it is not clear whether U.S. prosecutors have implicated Petro in a crime; the White House is said to have had no role in the investigations.
  • Petro has denied all drug‑trafficking ties and campaign funding from traffickers, and Colombia’s Embassy in Washington called the insinuations 'unverified' and lacking any legal or factual basis.

📊 Relevant Data

In 2024, the age-adjusted drug overdose death rate was 51.6 per 100,000 for non-Hispanic American Indian or Alaska Native people, 33.8 for non-Hispanic Black people, compared to 4.4 for non-Hispanic Asian people, with AIAN representing about 1% of the US population and Black people 12%.

Drug Overdose Deaths in the United States, 2023–2024 — CDC

Colombia is not a significant source of illicit fentanyl affecting the United States, with no detected fentanyl production laboratories in the country as of 2023, and the primary sources being Mexico for production and China for precursor chemicals.

Facts to Inform the Debate about the U.S. Government’s Anti-Drug Offensive in the Americas — WOLA

Opioid overdose death rates in 2024 were 35.5 per 100,000 for American Indian/Alaska Native people, 22.8 for Black people, and 17.5 for White people, reflecting a reversal from earlier trends where rates were higher among White people.

Opioid Overdose Deaths: National Trends and Variation by Demographics and States — KFF

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March 20, 2026