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		'El Chapo's' lawyers face tough choices 
		at trial's end 
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		 [January 28, 2019] 
		By Brendan Pierson 
 (Reuters) - With federal prosecutors 
		expected to rest their case against Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman on Monday, 
		lawyers for the accused Mexican drug kingpin have given few clues about 
		how they plan to counter three months of testimony by more than 50 
		government witnesses.
 
 Among the tough choices they face are whether to call their own 
		witnesses to try to undermine the prosecutors' evidence, and whether 
		Guzman should take the stand in his own defense. One of his attorneys 
		said on Friday that they would not reveal the names of any witnesses 
		unless they decided to call them.
 
 "Similarly, we will not disclose Joaquin's plans about testifying until 
		the time comes to inform the court," Guzman lawyer Eduardo Balarezo said 
		in a statement.
 
 Guzman, 61, the alleged leader of Mexico's Sinaloa Cartel, was 
		extradited to the United States in 2017. He has been on trial since 
		November on charges of trafficking vast quantities of cocaine, heroin 
		and other illegal drugs into the country. Prosecutors have called more 
		than a dozen former cartel members to testify against him.
 
		
		 
		
 The main defense argument, as put forth by Guzman lawyer Jeffrey 
		Lichtman in his opening statement, has been that the real leader of the 
		Sinaloa Cartel is Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada, and that Zambada bribed the 
		Mexican and U.S. governments to frame Guzman.
 
 Guzman's lawyers have discussed multiple potential witnesses with 
		prosecutors in open court, and have filed a motion suggesting they might 
		call an inmate in the U.S. prison system, but they have not publicly 
		revealed any names.
 
 Defendants in criminal cases are under no obligation to call any 
		witnesses. Many defendants in organized crime cases do not, said defense 
		lawyer Steven Boozang, who defended Boston mafia boss Francis "Cadillac 
		Frank" Salemme in a murder trial last year. He said the decision depends 
		on what exonerating evidence is available.
 
 "It has to be reliable," he said. "It has to be truthful."
 
 Elie Honig, a former federal prosecutor, said it could make sense for a 
		defendant to call witnesses if they could offer the jury an alternative 
		explanation of the evidence that proved a defendant's innocence. But he 
		said such witnesses can backfire if their testimony is not convincing.
 
 Lichtman said evidence for the defense's contention that Zambada framed 
		Guzman would emerge from the prosecution's own witnesses, but such 
		testimony largely failed to materialize. Multiple witnesses described 
		Guzman as either the boss of the cartel or an equal partner with Zambada. 
		The most explosive allegations about bribery came when one witness said 
		Guzman paid $100 million to former Mexican president Enrique Pena Nieto. 
		Pena Nieto has denied taking any bribes.
 
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			Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman is escorted by soldiers during a 
			presentation in Mexico City, Jan. 8, 2016. REUTERS/Tomas Bravo/File 
			Photo 
            
 
            In many cases, Honig said, the only viable defense strategy is to 
			seek to undermine prosecution witnesses who have pleaded guilty to 
			crimes and agreed to cooperate.
 "Tell the jury, 'You just heard a bunch of tales from a bunch of 
			lying criminal scoundrels who simply want to please the government, 
			and my guy is their meal ticket,'" he said.
 
 Guzman's lawyers have sharply interrogated cooperating witnesses 
			about their past crimes. Under cross-examination, former Guzman 
			associate Jorge Cifuentes admitted traveling the world on forged 
			identification documents; his former communications technician 
			Christian Rodriguez admitted not paying taxes on money the U.S. 
			government paid him to cooperate; and Colombian kingpin Juan Carlos 
			"Chupeta" Ramirez acknowledged taking part in dozens of murders.
 
 In Guzman's case, the strategy may have limits. Much of the evidence 
			against him is intercepted electronic messages in which Guzman 
			himself appears to discuss drug deals, and his lawyers have not so 
			far challenged their authenticity.
 
 Boozang said Guzman's lawyers were sure to discourage their client 
			from testifying himself, which would let prosecutors cross-examine 
			him.
 
 "Putting on the defendant, it's almost never done," Boozang said, 
			adding that the prosecution "would most likely have a field day" 
			with Guzman.
 
 But the alleged cartel boss may ignore his attorneys. Numerous 
			witnesses have described him as boastful and impulsive.
 
 In recent years, Guzman has courted publicity, seeking to make a 
			movie about his life and giving an interview to actor Sean Penn for 
			Rolling Stone magazine in 2015. In a Brooklyn courtroom, he could 
			find his biggest stage yet.
 
 
            
			 
			(Reporting By Brendan Pierson in New York; Editing by Anthony Lin 
			and Daniel Wallis)
 
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