How El Chapo's son helped U.S. arrest fabled narco chief "El Mayo"
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[July 29, 2024]
By Drazen Jorgic
(Reuters) - As a propeller plane on Thursday whirred towards the
U.S.-Mexico border to cross illegally, U.S. agents raced to meet it at a
small municipal airport near El Paso, Texas, and arrest two men who were
part of Mexican drug trafficking royalty.
The son of jailed former Sinaloa Cartel kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo"
Guzman planned to give himself up upon landing. The other passenger -
legendary septuagenarian trafficker Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada – did not
and was duped into getting on the plane by the younger man, according to
two current and two former U.S. officials familiar with the situation.
Zambada's arrest followed lengthy surrender talks between U.S.
authorities and El Chapo's son, Joaquin Guzman Lopez, the sources said.
But many American officials had given up hope on Joaquin turning himself
in, and were caught unaware when he sent a last-minute message that he
would arrive with a kingpin U.S. authorities had been chasing for four
decades.
"El Mayo was the cherry on top," said one U.S. official, who declined to
be identified because he was not authorized to speak publicly about the
arrests. "It wasn't expected at all."
Guzman Lopez had convinced Zambada to board the plane by telling him
that they were flying to see real estate in northern Mexico, according
to the two current and one former U.S. officials.
Reuters was the first news organization to report the arrests, ahead of
a Department of Justice statement on Thursday evening that confirmed the
two men had been detained in El Paso. The news agency spoke to current
and former officials to piece together a detailed account of the
operation.
The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Homeland Security
Investigations (HSI), the two agencies who carried out the operation,
scrambled agents from their local El Paso offices and barely reached the
airport by the time the private plane was landing, according to a fifth
source, a U.S. official who declined to give further details on the
arrests.
One worker at the Dona Ana County International Jetport, near El Paso,
told Reuters he saw a Beechcraft King Air plane land on Thursday
afternoon on the runway, where federal agents were already waiting.
"Two individuals got off the plane ... and were calmly taken into
custody," said the man, who declined to share his name out of concern
for his safety.
The unexpected arrest of El Mayo, in his late 70s, and the way he
appears to have been betrayed by Guzman Lopez, who is about 38 years
old, has jolted the Mexican drug trafficking world, triggering fears of
a bloody fissure in the Sinaloa Cartel between the two families that
control the group's biggest power bases.
Zambada is accused of being one of the most consequential traffickers in
Mexico's history, having co-founded the Sinaloa Cartel with "El Chapo"
Guzman, who was extradited to the U.S. in 2017 and is serving a life
sentence in a maximum security prison in Colorado.
Reuters could not determine why Guzman Lopez betrayed his father's
long-time partner, though the four current and former sources said it
was likely due to his desire to obtain a more favourable plea bargain
deal from U.S. authorities and help his brother, Ovidio, who was
arrested and extradited to the United States in 2023.
U.S. authorities have made drug bosses key targets, frequently striking
plea bargain deals with them in exchange for information that leads to
the capture of other high-ranking cartel figures.
The back-channel communication between American officials and Guzman
Lopez was carried out through lawyers, the first official said. Jeffrey
Lichtman, who represents both Guzman brothers, declined to comment.
Zambada, who was in a wheelchair, pleaded not guilty on Friday in a
Texas courtroom to drug charges, including continuing criminal
enterprise, narcotics importation conspiracy and money laundering.
His lawyer, Frank Perez, said on Friday that Zambada did not come to the
U.S. voluntarily. On Saturday night, Perez said Guzman Lopez had
"forcibly kidnapped" in Mexico and brought him to the United States
against his will.
Guzman Lopez is due to appear in court next week in Chicago, where he
was first indicted on drugs charges around 6 years ago.
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Plane believed to have carried Mexican drug lord Ismael "El Mayo"
Zambada and Joaquín Guzmán López, Santa Teresa, New Mexico, July 25,
2024. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez
Guzman Lopez is one of four sons of El Chapo - known as Los Chapitos,
or Little Chapos - who inherited their father's faction of the
cartel. Joaquin and Ovidio have the same mother, while the other two
siblings – Ivan and Jesus Alfredo – hail from El Chapo's first
marriage.
The brothers have in recent years come under ferocious pressure from
U.S. authorities, who have made them their main anti-narcotics
targets, portraying them and the Sinaloa Cartel as the biggest
traffickers of fentanyl into the United States. Fentanyl overdoses
have surged to become the leading cause of death for Americans
between the ages of 18 and 45.
Ray Donovan, a former high-ranking U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) official, said the defeats suffered by key
Sinaloa Cartel bosses in recent past are mainly down to their
embrace of fentanyl, which has risen up the political agenda in
Washington as the death told has mounted on U.S. streets.
"The number of Americans dying has put a lot more pressure," Donovan
said. "Fentanyl brought them down."
On Friday, U.S. President Joe Biden heralded the arrests and vowed
to continue combating "the scourge of fentanyl".
NEW GENERATION OF NARCOS
El Chapo's sons are known to be more violent and hot-headed than
Zambada, who had a reputation as a shrewd operator that liked to
stay in the shadows. Guzman Lopez was also seen as less important
than his other three brothers.
The U.S. authorities had a $15 million reward for the capture of
Zambada, who co-founded the Sinaloa Cartel in the late 1980s with El
Chapo. Guzman Lopez had a $5 million bounty on his head. Both men
face multiple indictments in the United States.
The first U.S. official cautioned that there are still many
questions unanswered about how or why Zambada, an ultra-cautious and
experienced cartel chieftain, found himself on that plane.
Mexican Security Minister Rosa Rodriguez said that Mexico was
informed of the detentions by the U.S. government, but that Mexican
authorities did not participate in the operation.
Outgoing Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has taken a
cautious approach to tackling the powerful cartels, curbing security
cooperation with U.S. authorities on fears that the previous
U.S.-Mexico strategy of targeting powerful kingpins was triggering
more nationwide violence.
In Oct. 2019, Mexico's military arrested Ovidio but were forced to
release him after hundreds of Sinaloa Cartel foot soldiers blocked
roads and fought running gun battles with soldiers as they to lay
siege to the city of Culiacan, the capital of Sinaloa. The military
arrested Ovidio again in Jan. 2023 and he was extradited in
September last year.
Matthew Allen, a former Special Agent in Charge of HSI's Arizona
division that built indictments against Guzman Lopez and other
Sinaloa Cartel figures, said both Zambada and Guzman Lopez had had
periodic conversations with U.S. officials about surrendering over
the years.
Allen, who maintains regular contact with former colleagues at HSI,
said many traffickers, especially those from the younger generation,
realize that giving themselves up, serving some time in jail and
then spending their wealth is a better option than risking death
from rivals in Mexico or capture by authorities that can lead to
lifelong prison terms. Some informants are allowed to enter witness
protection programs.
"They're seeing that this way you can do your time and do not have
to look over your shoulder for the rest of your life," he said.
(Reporting by Drazen Jorgic in London; Additional reporting by Luc
Cohen in New York, Laura Gottesdiener and Ana Isabel Martinez in
Mexico City; Editing by Daniel Flynn)
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