Skip to main content
Clear icon
22º

Son of Colombia's president is charged with money laundering

1 / 3

Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved

FILE - Presidential candidate Gustavo Petro, center, waves to supporters alongside his son Nicolas Petro Burgos, right, on election night in Bogota, Colombia, Sunday, May 29, 2022. Colombian police arrested Petros son Saturday, July 29, 2023, as part of a high-profile money laundering probe into funds he allegedly collected from convicted drug traffickers during last years presidential campaign. (AP Photo/Fernando Vergara, File)

BOGOTA – The son of Colombia’s president was charged Tuesday with money laundering and illicit enrichment at a hearing where prosecutors said he took thousands of dollars from drug traffickers and used it to buy luxurious homes and expensive cars.

Nicolás Petro, 36, pleaded innocent to the charges, which have raised questions about the financing of President Gustavo Petro’s 2022 presidential campaign. But towards the end of the hearing he appeared to change his stance, saying he was willing to “collaborate” with prosecutors who are also trying to investigate President Petro's campaign.

Recommended Videos



“I will do this for my family and for my baby who is about to be born,” said the younger Petro, who could face up to 30 years in prison if he is found guilty of money laundering.

The investigation against Nicolás Petro stems from a shocking declaration made by his ex-wife Daysuris Vásquez to local news magazine Semana in March.

It comes at a time when President Petro is losing popularity and has been exposed to attacks from opposition parties, which have become increasingly reluctant to cooperate with the president’s legislative agenda.

In the Semana interview, Vasquez said she was present at meetings where Nicolás Petro arranged a 600 million peso ($150,000) donation from a politician who was once convicted in Washington for drug trafficking, and who wanted to contribute to Gustavo Petro’s 2022 presidential campaign.

Vásquez accused her ex-husband of pocketing the money, and said that Petro’s presidential campaign had no knowledge of the donation.

In Tuesday’s hearing, prosecutors accused the younger Petro of using illicit funds to buy a mansion in the city of Barranquilla, a luxurious apartment and a Mercedes Benz SUV. They said that he registered the properties under the names of relatives in order to avoid investigations from tax officials.

Prosecutors said that Nicolás Petro, who was a legislator representing a northern coastal region, would have needed to earn ten times his salary in order to justify his expenses in 2022.

Prosecutors also accused Vásquez of co-operating in the money laundering scheme, and said she helped her husband hide thousands of dollars in cash in suitcases that the couple kept at their home.

The couple, who no longer live together, were arrested on Saturday night and have been held at the headquarters of the Chief Prosecutor’s office in Bogota, from where they attended Tuesday’s hearing.

President Petro said that he would not interfere with the investigation, and wrote a message on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, in which he said he hoped his son would “reflect on his mistakes.”

The president was hit by another corruption scandal in June, when his former ambassador to Venezuela said in voice messages that Petro’s presidential campaign broke finance limits, and hinted that it could have received money from drug traffickers. Petro denied those charges and said that all donations to his presidential campaign were carefully scrutinized.

The scandals have dented Petro’s popularity among voters in Colombia, where incidents linking political campaigns to drug traffickers bring back memories of the 1990s, a violent decade in which a former president was accused of taking money from the Cali cartel and had his U.S. visa cancelled.

During his first year in office, Petro has managed to broker a ceasefire with the nation’s largest rebel group. But has failed to get the nations congress to approve reforms to the nation’s health system, pensions and labor laws that he announced at the beginning of his term.