Terror group member pleads guilty to holding 3 US hostages
August 27, 2015  03:13
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A member of the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia faces a possible life sentence after admitting his role in the 2003 kidnapping of three Americans.

Diego Alfonso Navarrete Beltran pleaded guilty today in US District Court in Washington to three counts of hostage-taking, which carries a maximum sentence of life in prison.

The FARC is Colombia's main rebel movement, formed in 1964 as the armed wing of the Colombian Communist Party. US authorities say it evolved into a major armed force financed by drug trafficking, hostage-taking and extortion. It has been on the State Department's list of foreign terrorist organizations since 1997.

Then-US contractors Thomas Howes, Keith Stansell and Marc Gonsalves were conducting counter-drug aerial surveillance in southern Colombia in February 2003, when they were forced to crash land their plane on a mountainside and taken captive. 

Two others aboard the plane, American contractor Thomas Janis and Colombian army Sgt Luis Alcides Cruz were killed by FARC rebels at the crash site.

US authorities say Beltran, 43, guarded the hostages, who were often chained together and led on forced marches through the Colombian jungle. They were held in cages, left outside to face the elements and received no medical attention as their physical conditions deteriorated.
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