Colmenares: Where’s the Crime?

Netflix’s take on the Luis Colmenares case hits the screens this week. Will it do justice?


Who was Luis Andrés Colmenares? The 20-year-old student at Universidad de los Andes died after falling into a flooded culvert in Bogotá’s Parque Virrey after a Halloween party in 2010.

So how did he die? According to a defining court verdict in 2017, the popular student, who had been whooping it up with his friends in a night club close to the park, drowned after falling into the fast-flowing channel  – swollen by heavy rain on the mountains above – and his body carried deep into a storm-water tunnel.

Did he jump, fall, or was he pushed? There’s the rub. While the initial investigation concluded he jumped or fell, a year after his death, his family insisted he had been murdered. The case was reopened, the body exhumed, and a second autopsy done. Suspicion fell on his estrato–seis student buddies and a female close to his affections, Laura Moreno. Like Colmenares, Laura was the scion of a wealthy family. She also had everything the public yearns in their femme fatales: youth, wealth, striking good looks, political connections and a very calm exterior.

So it was murder then? Many Colombians think so. In the eight years following the tragedy, drawn-out court cases and sensationalist media sowed seeds of doubt to the accidental death verdict. The prosecution claimed improbability that a healthy young man could die in a shallow drainage channel. He must have been pushed, went the argument, or more likely beaten up and thrown in. Maybe by one of Laura’s male friends, or her personal bodyguard. The fact that firemen called out to search the culvert an hour after he went missing had found nothing added weight to a theory that he had been killed elsewhere and his body dumped there to fake an accident or suicide.

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Forensic experts then claimed to find evidence on his exhumed body that showed beatings, and multiple injuries impossible to come from a simple fall. The hunt was on for the culprit.

Laura Moreno, as a close companion that night, the object of Luis’s desires, and with a tough-guy ex-boyfriend in tow, was in the spotlight. By her own account she was also the last person to have seen him alive, having chased after him into the dark park to help him through a personal crisis triggered by a long night drinking.

Was it clear then? Not really. Now started a power-play between influential families – the Colmenares clan and the wealthy accused’s – with Colombia’s top lawyers and most ruthless prosecuting attorneys all willing to leak any juicy detail to a febrile media, and a tweeting, youtubing public galvanised by this fight of elephants. And trampled in the grass beneath was Laura Moreno, who became nationally vilified as an arch-priestess of evil who had her wayward friend killed and then used her family’s power and influence to wriggle out of a murder charge. Surely this real-life telenovela had found its villain.

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But then it all stopped: Well, yes. Unfortunately for the misogynistic masses who wanted to see Laura get sent down, in 2017, the whole prosecution case collapsed under the weight of its own inconsistencies. Fresh analysis showed Colmenares’ injuries were actually consistent with an accidental fall in the culvert. More to the point, evidence of ‘beatings’ from the second bungled necropsy was in fact looking at tissue damage from the first autopsy. Examination of lungs and airways showed he died by drowning.

Furthermore, rainfall and water-flow rates from the culvert on the night the student died – data covered up by the prosecution – proved the flow had force enough to carry a person into the tunnel.  In fact, actual tests in the culvert with dummies showed just that. Then it was revealed that the first firemen on the scene – on the night Colmenares disappeared – had never actually searched the tunnel. So the body was there all the time.

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And careful examination of the timelines of known locations of the students, their phone-calls and actions showed no time for them to have caused or witnessed a murder or found the opportunity to cover it up. Worse, prosecutors were found to have paid off criminals to act as fake witnesses to back the murder theory. Final verdict: accidental death.

So why is there a Netflix series starting this month called ‘Historia de un Crimen: Colmenares’? Good question, and one that Laura Moreno’s lawyer is also asking the streaming giant. I mean, if the death was an ‘accident’ then surely it can’t also be a ‘crime’.

Does this mean Netflix knows more about the case than Colombian justice? Unlikely. In fact, it seems that no-one connected with the real-life case – least of all the acquitted accused and the family of Colmenares – were consulted for the script. And Netflix is careful to say ‘a series inspired by real events’. Meaning bits are made up. And, so far, we’ve just seen a trailer, which – like the series title – strongly suggests foul play. But no-one really knows how the plot will play out until the series goes live. 

Could the Netflix series reboot the legal case? In fact, the case was never closed: the Colmenares family, still believing strongly that Luis was murdered, had appealed the 2017 ruling. Meanwhile the accused student friends of Colmenares have tried to move on with their lives and are furious at being dragged back to the spotlight. But even the Colmenares family are dismayed with Netflix’s intrusion in their grief, having no idea how their personal crisis will be portrayed on screen.

So in Netflix’s ‘Crime Story Colmenares’, there was no crime? Not unless you count false accusations, obfuscation of facts, dirty tricks, serial leaking, inept rescue services and trial by media: acts all contrary to normal justice procedures. Then the ‘victim’ was Laura Moreno. If Netflix did their homework, then that’s the twist in their tale.

Steve Hide: Former journalist, aid worker and tour guide who first came to Colombia very drunk in 1994, and has been back many times since, eventually settling with his family in Bogotá. Holidays are spent exploring corners of Colombia in an old 4x4 called Mitzi... Read about his travels on his site, Travels with Mitzi.

View Comments (10)

  • He was murdered and allah swt knows best . One day someone will come and tell the truth in she allah. People are soo heartless I can't understand it how can you do something like that and then lie and lie and live with it . How cruel are you to not help a mother 10years she s crying her eyes out for her baby who got murdered come on we need to solve this please don't ask money just help his mother and father give them justice i know someone in this world can help

  • Based on the documentaries, Laura and Colmenares are definitely guilty!!!
    Typical case of rich oligarchy families that can buy justice. It is easy for them to pay to twist the credibility of the witness.. It is easy for them to twist true justice with thier money! They may escape sentence here on earth by definitely they will all rot in hell!!!
    I really hated those so called friends who did nothing to help in the case. Instead, they cover for those rich criminals. Laura and Colmenares deserves life sentence for what they did! Definitely Colmenares murdered Luis and threw the body on the canal!

  • The author stated clearly that Netflix made things up in the series, then why they were used here to prove it’s a crime in real life?

  • AND WHAT ABOUT THE CELL PHONE PART.
    HOW COULD LAURA END UP WITH HIS PHONE, AND COULD NOT EXPLAIN WHY...

  • Luis Andres did not want to die of the fall because we all know that in this world there is the God of drunks. In addition, we should believe that neither Laura nor the firefighters actually entered the canal because it is difficult to explain why Luis Andres was black on the back, leaving the blood strictly dead towards the area of ​​the body you are sitting on, and after a during the period, water or someone else would have rolled it face down, as it was found, being hunted on the chest, hence it results that it had been overturned face down quite quickly. Laura most likely lied that she entered the channel to check but kept her lie to the end, on the one hand not to be suspected of lying and on the other hand not to be accused by the public that he abandoned Luis Andres after seeing either how he fell into the ditch or how he threw himself.

  • You can say whatewer you want and alegate the evidence proves their inocence ...funny you said the evidence from the persecutors where manipulated before... but what about the evidence from the first persecutor? the how convinient was that video tapes from all the cameras of the area of that day misteriously dissapear . Your so call now right take evidence proves nothing to the Colombian people... only corruption and the power behind moving the pupets of justice. I just said this "money can buy justice in heaven. Laura and Cardenas and all the accomplices deserves to roth in hell" and most of the colombians who follow the case will never forget or forgive but we trust justice will be serve eventually... by the power of God or karma. Those people will get none simpaty by the big majority.

  • despues de ver esto en netflix me quede pensando. pudo haber sido un accidente... pero que pasa con las grabaciones? entonces - como decia que era una serie basada en hechos - quise entender si la parte con las grabaciones era real o ficticia - pero me di cuenta que si - hubo grabaciones de las niñas y el papa de una de ellas. lo siento pero eso lo dice todo. Claro q el fiscal se puso un poco desesperado pero a la vez - no hay otra explicacion. tambien lo del reloj y el celular - el pobre joven se los paso a laura antes de ir a pelear con los otros.

  • The misogynistic masses comment is unnecessary and needlessly inflammatory. Would it make sense, if it were a Female victim with a possible Male culprit, to say the misandrist masses?

    Also you fail to provide sufficient, if any citations from the actual case to back up your answers. Is this normal for your publication or just an aberration in this case?

    • The misogynistic masses comment ISN’T unnecessary at all. Did you not notice that the “murder” theory is Laura Moreno’s EX BOYFRIEND killing him, and yet SHE - the one who the theory doesn’t even claim lifted a finger - is the one being blamed and prosecuted? Did that really go over your head?