Well, this is what I can add:
I found another newspaper article from which I remembered her. She and another artist (she started out as a painter) shared a house here with the object of becoming completely self sufficient. The other woman emigrated (or not) to Ireland to set up a similar project. The Dutch project apparently bombed, as she describes during an interview how she sold "her house and invested all the money in starting a project called The Gift". This project has now spread to virtually every (!) province and is intended to help people who are in debt or unable to sustain themselves and their families. She obviously knows what it means being in debt and in financial trouble as I found her somewhere on a site stating that she "is unable to pay the bill as she and her 3 kids are on welfare".
In another interview she tells how she got so tired and desperate from being in financial trouble that she has now opted to "live within Nature". I found her on several websites with regard to "workshops" in nature, haven't found any prices yet. Will update when I do.
I have also found her (as of 2004 or so) involved in many charity events; i.e. auctioning off paintings, the money of which went to charity, and starting a paint class for street kids to name a few. Her final objective is "to save money and go home", by which she means Colombia, where she was born. She's very emotional about that. She was adopted by a Dutch couple, haven't found any particulars on that yet but did find her on a school forum from which I gathered that she at least spent part of her primary school years in The Netherlands. So she has lived here basically most of her life. Got married, got kids, got divorced.
I'm not sure what happened to the money that was hauled in with help of LG, I'll look into that as well if I can. Lucia basically does what most *cough* enlightened people do here in The Netherlands: take a bit of this, take a bit of that, stir (not shake) and concoct their own personal "feel good medicine". They are completely unaware of 'misappropriation' or 'culture theft' and are actually shocked when pointed out that they're taking things which do not belong to them. The Dutch in particular have this 'share the wealth' attitude, and whole heartedly believe that they should be able to share other people's wealth as well. Don't think you can ever convince them otherwise, I'm afraid.
LH