Page 173 kidnapping and holding wealthy people:
Kirk, 67.
Page 173 ELN “taxed” bottling plants:
“Los paras contra Coca-Cola,”
Cambio
, February 8, 1999.
Page 173 rancher named Ramón Isaza:
Joseph Contreras, “Paramilitary Patriarch,”
Newsweek
, September 6, 1999.
Page 173 they began killing FARC and ELN “tax collectors”:
Kirk, 102-125; Dudley, 73.
Page 173 increasingly brutal massacres:
Dudley, 19, 71-73.
Page 173 paramilitaries . . . declared illegal:
Kirk, 125-128.
Page 173 Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia:
Kirk, 141-177.
Page 174 the brutal Freddy Rendón Herrera:
David Adams, “Colombia Shaken As Paramilitary Leaders Testify,”
St. Petersburg Times
, June 18, 2007.
Page 174 ordering the deaths of three thousand:
“‘H.H.’ se confiesa,”
El spectador
, August 2, 2008; “Ex-Paramilitary Chief in Colombia Admits to Atrocities,” Agence France Presse, August 3, 2008.
Page 174 decapitated a boy in front of the crowd:
Kirk, 195; Joshua Hammer, “Mayor with a Mission,”
Newsweek
, April 21, 1997; Tom Boswell, “Leading a City That Has Become a Battlefield,”
National Catholic Reporter
, January 24, 1997.
Page 174 cut off the head of an elderly man:
Adams, “Colombia Shaken As Paramilitary Leaders Testify.”
Page 174 bottling plant in Carepa was struggling:
Luis Hernán Manco Monroy and Oscar Giraldo Arango, interviews by the author.
Page 174 SINALTRAINAL began to organize workers:
Alejandro García, lawyer for SINALTRAINAL, interview by the author; William José Alberto Cruz Suarez deposition,
Gil
2:191-196.
Page 174 workers can be fired at will:
Alejandro García, interview by the author.
Page 175 Manco simply disappeared:
Manco, interview by the author.
Page 175 Two weeks later, it was Giraldo’s turn:
Giraldo, interview by the author.
Page 175 shot while drinking on his front stoop:
Gómez death certificate,
Gil
1:82; letter from Luz Marina Cifuentes Cataño, March 31, 1997;
Gil
1:108-109.
Page 175 seeing Milan socializing with local paramilitaries:
Complaint (1),
SINALTRAINAL v. Coke
, 20; Manco and Giraldo, interviews by the author.
Page 175 “sweep away the union”:
Complaint,
SINALTRAINAL v. Coke
(1), 19; Luís Adolfo Cardona Usma deposition,
Gil
2:181-187.
Page 175 “hasn’t been destroyed”:
Hernán Manco, amplification of deposition,
Gil
1: 283-291; Manco, interview by the author.
Page 176 protesting Milan’s associations:
Letter from Javier Correa to Bebidas y Alimientos de Urabá, September 27, 1995, included as exhibit B to original complaint (1),
SINALTRAINAL v. Coke
.
Page 176 negotiating a new labor contract:
List of worker demands, November 22, 1996,
Gil
2:226-230.
Page 176 Born in a small town . . . thrived at the plant:
Martín Gil, interview by the author.
Page 176 argued for a workers’ compensation payment:
Report, Cuerpo Técnico de Investigación (hereafter CTI) Apartadó, June 18, 1997,
Gil
1:269-279; Ariosto Milan Mosquera deposition,
Gil
4:16-21.
Page 176 crack of a pistol rang out behind him:
Giraldo, interview by the author.
Page 176 watched Gil’s head snap backward:
Manco, interview by the author.
Page 177 ten bullets . . . outside the gate:
Gil autopsy report, December 10, 1996 (Diligencia de Necropsia, No. UCH-NC-96-412),
Gil
1:87; photographs of Gil’s body,
Gil
1:243- 246. Neither the Coca-Cola Company nor its bottlers have ever denied that Gil was killed at the plant. In initial reports, the company claimed that he died outside the gates; however, in more recent interviews, including the author’s interview of Ed Potter, the company has conceded that he was killed inside the plant.
Page 177 Adolfo Cardona, ran to the body:
Cardona, interview by the author; Cardona deposition,
Gil
2:181-187.
Page 177 jumped on his own motorcycle . . . declare him dead:
Gil, interview by the author.
Page 177 known as “El Diablo”. . . safety of the police station:
Cardona, interview by the author; Cardona deposition.
Page 178 Bebidas would buy plane tickets:
Manco and Giraldo, interviews by the author.
Page 178 paramilitaries were busy breaking into the union hall:
Letter from Javier Correa and Hernán Manco to Fiscalía,
Gil
1:52; CTI Antioquia report, October 5, 1998,
Gil
1, unidentified page; Complaint (1),
SINALTRAINAL v. Coke
, 21.
Page 179 “That kid was murdered at the plant”:
Manco, interview by the author.
Page 179 forty-five members signed letters or fled town:
List prepared by Javier Correa, and resignation letters,
Gil
2:100-150.
Page 179 wasn’t an isolated occurrence:
Javier Correa, interview by the author.
Page 179 SINALTRAINAL is unapologetically militant:
Lesley Gill, interview by the author; SINALTRAINAL,
Una delirante ambición imperial
(Bogotá: Universo Latino, 2003).
Page 180 nothing to say about the situation:
Amplification of deposition of William José Alberto Cruz Suarez,
Gil
2:216-220; Alejandro García, interview by the author.
Page 180 learned about the murder days after:
Mark Thomas,
Belching Out the Devil: Global Adventures with Coca-Cola
(New York: Nation Books, 2009), 351.
Page 180 fault of the paramilitaries:
Detention order for Miguel Enrique Vergara Salgado,
Gil
3:320-347.
Page 180 terminated for “abandoning their place of work”:
Lesley Gill, “Labor and Human Rights: ‘The Real Thing’ in Colombia,” paper presented to the Human Rights Committee of the American Anthropological Association, Washington, D.C., November 28, 2004; amplification of deposition of William José Alberto Cruz Suarez,
Gil
2:216-220.
Page 180 “You have to leave”:
Manco, interview by the author.
Page 181 threatened him at gunpoint:
Giraldo, interview by the author.
Page 181 “No, we do not drink”:
Manco and Giraldo, interviews by the author.
Page 181 “Conducting business in the current environment”:
Jeffrey Distler, Consumer Affairs Specialist, The Coca-Cola Company, to Ellie Mitchell, United Steelworkers Union, October 24, 2001.
Page 182 investigation into Gil’s murder:
Fiscalía General de la Nación, Unidad Nacional de Derechos Humanos, Radicado Preliminar No. 164 (
Gil
).
Page 182 identity of “Caliche”:
CTI report, October 5, 1998,
Gil
1: 205-206; Ariel Gómez death certificate,
Gil
1:280.
Page 182 identified as Enrique Vergara:
Letter from Gloria Correa Martínez, Unidad Nacional de Derechos Humanos, August 1998,
Gil
1:163.
Page 182 henchman of El Alemán:
CTI report, June 19, 1998,
Gil
1:313-324; CTI report, undated,
Gil
1:327-330.
Page 182 Multiple witnesses . . . hang out with them:
José Joaquín Giraldo Graciano deposition,
Gil
2:24-29; José Heriberto Sierra Renfigo deposition,
Gil
2:30-36; Gudnara del Socorro Osorio deposition,
Gil
2:41-46.
Page 182 Marín let the paramilitaries:
Joaquín Giraldo deposition,
Gil
2:24-29; José Heriberto Sierra Renfigo deposition,
Gil
2:30-34; Humberto de Jesús Peña deposition,
Gil
2:35-40.
Page 182 Milan had resigned:
Ariosto Milan Mosquera to Richard Kirby Kielland, November 28, 1996,
Gil
3:17.
Page 182 Marín left six months later:
Rigoberto Marín Restrepo to Peggy Ann Kielland, June 25, 1997,
Gil
3:24.
Page 182 not only for Cepillo, but for Marín and Milan as well:
Arrest warrants, February 10, 1999,
Gil
2:233-250.
Page 183 “leaves not the slightest doubt”:
Orders for preventive detention, September 2, 1999,
Gil
3:219-247.
Page 183 declared their innocence . . . collaborating with guerrillas himself:
Ferenc Alain Legitime Julio (Milan’s lawyer), undated letter,
Gil
3:267-278; Ariosto Milan Mosquera deposition,
Gil
4:16-21; Rigoberto Marín Restrepo deposition,
Gil
4:22-26; Rigoberto Marín Restrepo amplification of deposition,
Gil
4:124-130.
Page 183 it didn’t have sufficient evidence:
Decision, June 19, 2000,
Gil
4:153-161.
Page 183 typical of the Colombian justice system:
Dora Lucy, interview by the author.
Page 183 fewer than a hundred convictions:
Human Rights Watch,
World Report 2009—Colombia
, January 14, 2009.
Page 183 public backlash:
Human Rights Watch, “Attorney General Reno in Colombia, March 3-4,”
Human Rights Watch Backgrounder,
March, 3, 1999.
Page 184 arrested General Alejo del Río:
Human Rights Watch,
“
A Wrong Turn: The Record of the Colombian Attorney General’s Office,”
Colombia
14, no. 3(B) (2002).
Page 169 sacked the head of the Human Rights Unit:
Human Rights Watch, “A Wrong Turn,” 2.
Page 184 “Osorio did severe damage”:
Adam Isacson, interview by the author.
Page 184 bases near Coca-Cola bottling plants:
Steven Dudley, “War in Colombia’s Oil-fields,”
The Nation
, August 5, 2002.
Page 184 met with AUC head Carlos Castaño:
“Los paras contra Coca-Cola,”
Cambio,
February 8, 1999.
Page 185 “I don’t think it’s valid”:
Maria McFarland, interview by the author.
Page 186 profits of $10 million a year:
David J. Lynch, “Murder and Payoffs Taint Business in Colombia,”
USA Today
, October 30, 2007.
Page 186 company insisted . . . banana plantations of Urabá:
Sibylla Brodzinsky, “Chiquita Case Puts Big Firms on Notice,”
Christian Science Monitor
, April 11, 2007.
Page 186 “Simply put”:
David J. Lynch, “Murder and Payoffs Taint Business in Colombia,”
USA Today
, October 30, 2007.
Page 186 “peace and justice” law:
“The Perils of ‘Parapolitics,’ ”
The Economist
, March 23, 2007.
Page 186 “The companies that benefited”:
“‘H.H.’ se confiesa,”
El spectador
, August 2, 2008.
Page 186 arrangement with Chiquita as well as Dole:
José Gregorio Mangones Luno affidavit, October 29, 2009,
Does (1-44) v. Chiquita Brands International Inc. et al.
, United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, 9:2008cv80465; Charlie Cray, “Hiring Death Squads Is Coming Back to Haunt U.S. Companies,” AlterNet, February 16, 2010; Juan Smith, “Colombia; Ex-Paramilitary Implicates Two U.S. Companies in Murder of Trade Unionists,” North American Congress on Latin America, December 14, 2009.
Page 186 Raúl Hasbún . . . ordering the deaths:
“Las confesiones de Raúl Hasbún,”
Semana
, October 4, 2008, English version.
Page 187 Isidro Gil . . . “collecting money for the guerrillas”:
Steven Dudley, “Colombian Paramilitary Tells How He Financed His Own Murder Inc.: Bananas,”
Miami Herald
, March 21, 2009.
Page 187 Magdalena Medio . . . hundreds of bodies:
Dudley, 41-43, 65; Kirk, 110, 125.
Page 187 Barrancabermeja was outside their control:
Dudley, 18-19, 123.
Page 187 “The threats started in 2001”:
Juan Carlos Galvis, interview by the author.
Page 188 SINALTRAINAL had nearly two thousand members:
William Mendoza, interview by the author.
Page 188 expanding throughout other South American countries:
Panamerican Beverages Inc., Annual Report, 2003.
Page 188 acquired a 10 percent share . . . “anchor bottler”:
Panamerican Beverages Inc., Annual Report, 2003; “Panamerican Beverages and Panamco LLC Historical Timeline,” submitted as exhibit to a deposition in
SINALTRAINAL v. Coke
, May 1, 2003; “Anchors Aboard: Coke Gives Panamco Larger Bottling Role in Latin America,”
Beverage World
, December 1, 1995.
Page 188 25 percent by 1997:
“Panamerican Beverages and Panamco LLC Historical Timeline,” submitted as exhibit to a deposition in
SINALTRAINAL v. Coke
, May 1, 2003; “Panamco Merges with Coca-Cola y Hit de Venezuela; Strengthens Position as Leading Anchor Bottler,” Business Wire, May 12, 1997.
Page 188 Panamco consolidated seventeen plants:
Panamerican Beverages Inc., Annual Report, 2003.
Page 189 Some 6,700 Coke workers . . . cutting contracts with its workers:
Gill, “Labor and Human Rights”; Lesley Gill, “Coca-Cola in Colombia: Increased Profits, Downsized Workforce,”
Colombia Journal
, July 27, 2004.
Page 189 acquired by Mexico’s Coca-Cola FEMSA:
Panamco proxy statement, March 23, 2003; Coca-Cola FEMSA, S.A. de C.V., Annual Report, 2004.
Page 189 officials met directly with a member . . . spared any violence:
Galvis and Mendoza, interviews by the author; Amnesty International, “Colombia: Killing, Arbitrary Detentions, and Death Threats—The Reality of Trade Unionism in Colombia,” January 23, 2007.