Lawyer who once represented drug kingpin El Chapo wins judge post in
Mexico
[June 19, 2025]
MEXICO CITY (AP) — A lawyer who once represented drug kingpin
Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán won a judgeship in the northern state of
Chihuahua in Mexico’s historic judicial elections this month, according
to the vote count concluded Wednesday.
Silvia Delgado García won a spot as a criminal court judge in Ciudad
Juarez, across the border from El Paso, Texas. The winners were
scheduled to have their results certified on Thursday. |

Silvia Delgado García, a lawyer for former drug lord Joaquín "El Chapo"
Guzmán in 2016, campaigns ahead of the upcoming judicial elections, in
Ciudad Juarez, April 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Christian Chavez, File) |
In 2016, Delgado García was a member of Sinaloa cartel leader
Guzmán’s legal team when he was temporarily held in a prison in
Ciudad Juarez before being extradited to the United States. He
was eventually tried, convicted and sentenced to life in prison
in the U.S.
Some critics of electing judges, and a human rights litigation
group called Defensorxs, had labeled Delgado García “high risk”
before the June 1 vote, because “she defends alleged drug
traffickers.”
Hailed as a way to make corrupt judges accountable to the people
and clean up Mexico’s judiciary by former President Andrés
Manuel López Obrador, the historic elections that covered more
than 2,600 positions ranging up to the country’s Supreme Court,
drew only a paltry 13% voter participation.
Critics feared it would politicize the judiciary and offer
organized crime an easier to influencing judicial decisions.
Mexico's governing Morena party was poised to gain control of
the Supreme Court as a majority of the winners had strong ties
to the party or were aligned ideologically.
Delgado García did not respond to requests for comment after the
election, but spoke to the AP before it.
Delgado García explained her decision to represent Guzmán as a
fundamental right of the legal system: “Everyone has a right to
an effective defense.”
She noted that she only helped at one hearing where the power
went out, and her job was to visit him in the Ciudad Juarez
prison where he was being held.
“If they give me a client of that magnitude, in terms of resume
that’s going to help me,” she said.
She campaigned on her 18 years of experience as a criminal
defense attorney.
“I am a citizen who believes in the law, and I am extremely
prepared to carry out the job and I aim to be impartial in the
decisions I hand down.”
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