There are certain things working for you, and as you pointed out, things working against you here...
Unfortunately, your demographic puts you into one of the more unforgiving categories when it comes to academic evaluation. A GPA in the low range is going to hurt, regardless, however the further one is into their career and the more one has to show in terms of accomplishments, the less detrimental a low GPA will be to your application. Luckily for you, you are roughly 8 years into a successful career and have quite a few accolades, namely 3 CFA levels and an excellent GRE score of 330. In other words, you've demonstrated that you are more than just a GPA. Furthermore, you seem like a unique find with dynamic extracurricular activities and a competitive professional resume. Essentially, everything else seems to fall in your favor (for the most part).
You would have to be certain that your recommendations were stellar, and by "stellar" I mean they must be glowing, specific, give examples, and the right recommenders must be carefully selected. Furthermore, your essays are going to be incredibly important. Everyone assumes that schools just tick off boxes quickly, but these essays matter a great deal especially when you have something they can easily ding you with, or if you are a nontraditional candidate. It goes without saying that you must address your low GPA directly in the optional essay, but in a perfectly tactful and honest way. Lastly, your interviews, school visits, engagement with the schools, etc. are going to matter greatly.
So, here is my assessment:
If you apply to 2-year programs, your 8 years of experience may work against you as this is at the very far end of the spectrum. While it will help with you GPA story, it will concern admissions as to whether you are too far along in your career to be a fit for this type of program. A 1-year program may make more sense, and there are advantages to this, but a 1-year program may not help if you are looking to make a big career switch. This is something you need to look into further and you need to decide the "why" of your attending business school. What is your ultimate career goal? What are your aspirations and what are you willing to sacrifice? You need to be specific.
Reach+: M7
This is already a highly competitive landscape for your demographic, add in the GPA and it becomes a reach +. I am a believer in putting yourself out there, always, despite the money, time, and effort. All it takes is 1 school to say yes. The odds are not in your favor due to your GPA, but if someone at even one of these schools can see past that, you're in.
Target: T10-20 / Top 1-year international program
This would be the most realistic and most comfortable range I believe. There are excellent schools in this range that I think would be lucky to have you.
Safety: T25-T40 (Somewhere such as Vanderbilt)
I am a believer that if you are intent on going to b-school regardless, and there is a school beyond T20 that you would attend, then apply as insurance.
Let me know if you have any questions! I'd be happy to tell you a bit about my own journey/strategy.