SAN DIEGO (Reuters) - A suspected
high-level Sinaloa drug cartel operative known as "Chino Antrax" was
extradited on Thursday from the Netherlands to the United States, where
he faces charges related to drug smuggling, the Justice Department said.
Jose Rodrigo Arechiga-Gamboa, an alleged bodyguard and leader of a
cartel enforcement unit called "Los Antrax", was flown by the U.S.
Marshals Service and the Drug Enforcement Administration from
Amsterdam to San Diego International Airport on Thursday, the
Justice Department said in a statement.
"(Arechiga-Gamboa) allegedly assisted the Sinaloa Cartel by
providing security for narcotics shipments and conducting
enforcement operations," the statement said, adding he "rose to
become one of the highest-level leaders of the Sinaloa Cartel."
A federal grand jury in Dan Diego indicted Arechiga-Gamboa in
December 2013 on charges of conspiracy to distribute controlled
substances intended for importation and conspiracy to import
controlled substances, the Justice Department said.
Arechiga-Gamboa was arrested at the request of the United States
days later at the Amsterdam Airport Schiphol as he disembarked from
a flight from Mexico City. He is to be arraigned on Friday before
U.S. Magistrate Judge Mitchell D. Dembin in San Diego, in southern
California.
Arechiga-Gamboa reputedly posts photos of his exploits on social
media websites where he purportedly can be seen decked out in
designer clothing, near luxury cars and holding automatic weapons,
his face hidden from view.
In one photo, he appears to jump uninvited into view beside Paris
Hilton while she is giving a television interview.
Authorities used unspecified forensic techniques to identify
Arechiga-Gamboa, who they say has undergone "significant" plastic
surgery, attempted to alter his fingerprints, and was traveling
under a fake Mexican passport, according to the Department of
Justice.
The statement also said Arechiga-Gamboa handled transportation and
logistics for Joaquin "Shorty" Guzman, the world's most wanted drugs
lord who was captured earlier this year in collaboration with U.S.
agents.
(Writing by Eric M. Johnson; Editing by Paul Tait)