Ex-Vanguard Broker Charged With Killing Girlfriend Is Suspended by CFP Board
What You Need to Know
CFP Board imposed an interim suspension of the CFP certification against a former Vanguard broker who allegedly murdered his girlfriend in Bogota, Colombia, in January..
The ex-broker was charged with femicide and obstruction of justice.
Prosecutors asked that the suspect receive a 40-year prison sentence.
The Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards said Tuesday it suspended the CFP certification of a former Vanguard broker who allegedly murdered his girlfriend in Bogota, Colombia.
The interim suspension against John Poulos of Colleyville, Texas, was effective as of Feb. 17, CFP Board said.
According to a CFP Board news release and multiple Colombian and U.S. news reports, Poulos was charged in Bogota with femicide (the intentional killing of a woman or girl for her gender) and obstruction of justice on Jan. 26 in Bogota.
Poulos was registered as a broker with Vanguard Marketing Corporation in Scottsdale, Arizona from April 2022 until last month, according to his report on the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority’s BrokerCheck website.
He was dismissed by Vanguard on Jan. 26 because he was “under review for being charged with multiple serious non-financial crimes outside of the United States, including femicide, in violation of Vanguard’s professional conduct policy,” according to a disclosure on his report on BrokerCheck.
Vanguard did not immediately respond to a request for comment about its former broker on Wednesday.
Prior to Vanguard, Poulos was registered as a broker with Northwestern Mutual in Milwaukee in 2009 and then again from 2011-2020, in Franklin, Wisconsin.
Body in Suitcase
The victim was Valentina Trespalacios, a 21-year-old DJ in Bogota, according to The City Paper Bogota. Poulos, 35, was in a long-distance relationship with her for more than eight months and arrived in Colombia on the night of Jan. 19, according to the report, which cited the chief investigator of the Colombian attorney general’s office.
Video footage that captured Poulos arriving near the exit doors of International Arrivals at the Colombia airport showed him hauling a blue suitcase that was believed to be the same one into which he dumped Trespalacios’ body less than 72 hours later, the report said.
Poulos took an Uber car to his Airbnb apartment in Bogota’s Chico Navarra neighborhood entered the building at 8:53 p.m. Trespalacios, a student of international business at UNINPAHU, arrived there the following evening, the report said.
Trespalacios died at about 9 a.m. on Jan. 22 by “mechanical asphyxia,” the report said, citing the findings of the national coroner. Poulos was seen in video footage leaving the apartment at 9:12 a.m. with two black bags believed to belong to Trespalacios.
At 9:51 a.m. that morning, Poulos entered the apartment with a shopping cart into which he placed a blue suitcase, partially covered in a grey blanket, the report said. The blanket was believed to have covered the victim’s face because her entire body didn’t fit into the suitcase, according to the report.