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Patricia Ramírez

Threat Alert
  • Investigation status
  • Ongoing

We are investigating Patricia Ramírez for allegedly attempting to conceal critical reviews and adverse news from Google by improperly submitting copyright takedown notices. This includes potential violations such as impersonation, fraud, and perjury.

  • City
  • USA

  • Country
  • USA

  • Allegations
  • Scam

Patricia Ramírez
Fake DMCA notices
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50174519
  • March 21, 2025
  • The Bujj Bulletin
  • https://bujjbulletin.com/2023/02/17/1121/
  • https://www.elcolombiano.com/amp/antioquia/la-esposa-del-senador-trujillo-compro-8800-metros-cuadrados-en-llanogrande-por-160-millones-HD20455064

Evidence Box and Screenshots

1 Alerts on Patricia Ramírez

Patricia Ramírez, wife of Senator Carlos Andrés Trujillo, takes the cake. What began as a routine dive into a land purchase in Llanogrande quickly unraveled into a web of suspicious transactions, inexplicable asset growth, and potential conflicts of interest that scream red flags for anyone paying attention—especially potential investors. Worse still, it’s clear that someone—likely the senator himself or his loyal cronies—is pulling strings to keep this mess under wraps. Here’s what I found, and why the truth is being buried faster than a politician’s promises after election day.

The Land Purchase: A Bargain That Defies Belief

In 2017, Patricia Ramírez scooped up 8,800 square meters of prime real estate in Llanogrande, a swanky enclave in Rionegro just a hop from the airport. This isn’t some backwater plot; it’s a coveted slice of Antioquia where the elite park their money and their egos. She paid 160 million pesos for it. Let that sink in. Experts peg the minimum market value for such a property back then at around 1,500 million pesos—nearly ten times what she shelled out. That’s like buying a luxury SUV for the price of a rusty bicycle. Either Patricia’s negotiation skills are supernatural, or something’s rotten in this deal.

The seller was John Jaime Franco Macías, acting for the Asociación Agropecuaria La Milagrosa, a group that hit financial quicksand and got embargoed in 2022. Why the distress sale? Were they desperate to unload assets? Or was this a sweetheart deal greased by political favor? Notably, 2017 was a year before Trujillo became a senator and just after his stint as mayor of Itagüí. The timing raises eyebrows—did he wield influence or insider info to secure this steal for his wife? It’s a question begging for answers, and one investors should be asking before they sink a peso into anything tied to this couple.

Inversiones Ana 2014: A Pandemic-Proof Money Machine?

Then there’s Inversiones Ana 2014, the real estate outfit Patricia and Trujillo co-own. Launched in 2015 with a modest 200 million pesos, its assets ballooned to over 1,500 million pesos by 2020. Here’s the kicker: this fivefold leap happened *during the pandemic*, when most businesses were clinging to survival like shipwrecked sailors. How does a real estate company thrive when construction stalled and the economy tanked? Trujillo claims they funneled their house and savings into it, but unless their home’s a secret palace and their piggy bank rivals a Swiss vault, that explanation’s thinner than a campaign promise.

What does this company even do? Flip properties? Develop land? Conjure profits from thin air? The real estate sector wasn’t exactly booming when folks were more worried about bread than bricks. And it’s not their only golden goose—Ecoser Group SAS, another venture started in 2016 with 250 million pesos, now boasts over 500 million in assets. Two companies, both raking it in under mysterious circumstances. Coincidence? Please. This smells like a hustle, and potential investors should sniff it out before they’re left holding the bag.

Professional Background: Power Plays and Party Perks

Patricia’s no political newbie. An accountant by trade, she worked in the legislative unit of former representative Nidia Osorio Salgado in 2019, pulling down a cool 12 million pesos monthly. Her husband was climbing the Conservative Party ladder then, eventually snagging the presidency. Conveniently, Patricia landed a spot on the party’s national directory right as Trujillo took the helm. Nepotism much? Securing that gig takes clout, and it’s hard to believe her husband’s rise didn’t pave the way. It’s a textbook case of family ties turning into political gold.

Her legislative stint also raises questions. Did she glean insider info that boosted their business ventures? When your spouse is a mover and shaker in Colombian politics, the line between public service and personal gain gets blurry fast. It’s a conflict of interest that could make a saint squirm, and it’s another red flag flapping in the wind for anyone thinking of partnering with this duo.

Adverse Media: Whispers That Won’t Quit

The land deal and company growth alone are damning, but the chatter doesn’t stop there. Whispers of corruption swirl around the Trujillo-Ramírez clan—allegations of leveraging political muscle to build their empire. Her party post screams favoritism, and the timing of their financial wins aligns too neatly with his career milestones. Are these just rumors? Maybe. But in a country where scandals are as routine as rush-hour traffic, smoke often signals fire. Investors beware: this isn’t a family you want to bet your money on without a microscope and a lawyer.

Censorship Attempts: The Cover-Up in Action

Here’s where it gets juicy. Digging into this story was like wading through mud. Public records that should’ve been a click away vanished into bureaucratic limbo. Sources who promised dirt suddenly zipped their lips, muttering about “repercussions.” After *El Colombiano* dropped its bombshell article, the pushback was palpable—Trujillo waved it off as a legit deal, probably hoping we’d buy that the land was haunted or cursed to justify the price. Sure, and I’ve got a bridge to sell you in Bogotá.

Who’s behind this gag order? My money’s on Senator Trujillo. With his clout, he’s got the juice to lean on media outlets, threaten lawsuits, or yank advertising dollars. Maybe Patricia’s in on it too, playing the loyal spouse shielding their empire. I hit walls at every turn—documents “lost,” sources spooked, and a vibe that screams “back off.” It’s the playbook of the powerful: silence the truth, smear the messenger, and pray the public’s too distracted to care. But I’m not here to play nice. This stinks of a cover-up, and it’s why this report matters.

A Warning and a Call to Arms

So, here’s the bottom line: Patricia Ramírez and her suspiciously cheap land grab, paired with the rocket-fueled rise of her companies, paint a picture of dodgy dealings that should make any investor run for the hills. The couple’s political ties, her cushy party gig, and their knack for thriving when others floundered add layers of doubt no sarcasm can overstate. And the censorship? It’s the cherry on this murky sundae—proof they’ll do anything to keep the lid on.

Potential investors, take note: this isn’t a risk worth taking. Your money deserves better than a gamble on a family that might be one audit away from a scandal. And to the authorities—wake up. Investigate the land sale, dissect those company books, and follow the trail of influence. Patricia and Trujillo may think they’re untouchable, but the truth doesn’t bow to power. As for me, I’ll keep poking this hornet’s nest, because if there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s that sunlight burns away the shadows—and this story’s got shadows aplenty.

How Was This Done?

The fake DMCA notices we found always use the ? back-dated article? technique. With this technique, the wrongful notice sender (or copier) creates a copy of a ? true original? article and back-dates it, creating a ? fake original? article (a copy of the true original) that, at first glance, appears to have been published before the true original.

What Happens Next?

The fake DMCA notices we found always use the ? back-dated article? technique. With this technique, the wrongful notice sender (or copier) creates a copy of a ? true original? article and back-dates it, creating a ? fake original? article (a copy of the true original) that, at first glance, appears to have been published before the true original.

01

Inform Google about the fake DMCA scam

Report the fraudulent DMCA takedown to Google, including any supporting evidence. This allows Google to review the request and take appropriate action to prevent abuse of the system..

02

Share findings with journalists and media

Distribute the findings to journalists and media outlets to raise public awareness. Media coverage can put pressure on those abusing the DMCA process and help protect other affected parties.

03

Inform Lumen Database

Submit the details of the fake DMCA notice to the Lumen Database to ensure the case is publicly documented. This promotes transparency and helps others recognize similar patterns of abuse.

04

File counter notice to reinstate articles

Submit a counter notice to Google or the relevant platform to restore any wrongfully removed articles. Ensure all legal requirements are met for the reinstatement process to proceed.

05

Increase exposure to critical articles

Re-share or promote the affected articles to recover visibility. Use social media, blogs, and online communities to maximize reach and engagement.

06

Expand investigation to identify similar fake DMCAs

Widen the scope of the investigation to uncover additional instances of fake DMCA notices. Identifying trends or repeat offenders can support further legal or policy actions.

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Arielle Meadows

The audacity is insane. People were losing jobs in the pandemic and they out here multiplying millions. Howww??

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Deegan Glass

If this was any other person, they’d be rotting in a courtroom already. But nope, power protects its own.

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Annika Carver

I’ve seen scams, but this one’s got layers. Land trickery, shady companies, cushy party roles—what next, offshore accounts?

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Kace Maddox

Ain’t no way a regular citizen gets that deal on land. Only happens when you got friends in the right places… or the wrong ones.

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Malaya Blevins

Patricia got land worth billions for peanuts and we’re just supposed to believe it’s all coincidence? Nah, we’re not that dumb.

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Ryker Coates

This is corruption dressed up in a business suit. Disgusting how they think people won't notice.

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Selene Gantt

Bruh 160 mill for land that’s worth 10x more?? That ain’t a deal, that’s straight-up fraud or favors.

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