The
U.S. Justice Department last month charged leaders of the
Sinaloa Cartel with trafficking fentanyl and other drugs,
including four sons of El Chapo, the cartel's one time leader
who is now imprisoned in the U.S.
The letter was sent on behalf of El Chapo's four indicted sons
known as "Los Chapitos," or little Chapos, including Ovidio
Guzman, who was captured in Mexico in January and awaits
extradition to the United States.
"We have never produced, manufactured or marketed fentanyl or
any of its derivatives," the sons wrote in the letter, published
by Mexican news outlet Milenio late on Wednesday.
The letter was shared with Milenio by Jose Refugio Rodriguez,
who when contacted by Reuters confirmed he is the Guzman family
lawyer.
In the letter, the sons say they are not the Sinaloa Cartel's
leaders but rather are the victims of an international
misinformation campaign by companies, the media and public
figures that has painted them to be notorious drug traffickers.
Their letter was in response to a press conference on April 14
in Washington, DC, where senior U.S. officials said the Sinaloa
Cartel was the main supplier of illicit fentanyl to the United
States.
They also singled out Los Chapitos as key figures in the Sinaloa
Cartel, blaming them for worsening the U.S. opioid epidemic.
Mexico and the United States agreed last month to ramp up
efforts to stop the trafficking of fentanyl, which has driven a
surge in overdose deaths in the United States.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Boyle and Drazen Jorgic; Editing by
Chris Reese)
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