Mexican forces escorted notorious
drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman out of an armored vehicle and
into a helicopter late Friday night following his arrest after months on the
run.
Mexican security forces trying to
capture notorious drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman in Sinaloa
encountered heavy gunfire that led to the deaths of various suspects, the
attorney general said.
The people linked to the July
escape of Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman included two
pilots, one of his attorneys and a brother-in-law, the attorney general said.
Guzman was arrested Friday.
-- Mexican authorities snared drug
lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman in a bloody raid Friday, recapturing
one of the world's most notorious and slippery criminals."Mission
Accomplished," President Enrique Peña Nieto announced via Twitter.
"We have him."
Members of Mexico's navy caught
Guzman in an operation about 4:30 a.m. (6:30 a.m. ET) in the coastal city of
Los Mochis in Sinaloa state, a senior law enforcement official in Mexico told
CNN.
Several people aligned with Guzman
died in the raid, the official said. The Mexican navy put the number of dead at
five, with six others arrested. No navy personnel were killed, and only one was
injured.
Peña Nieto said the recapture of
Guzman culminates "days and nights" of collaborative work among
Mexican intelligence and police agencies.
"They are a pride to our
nation," he said, referring to the multiagency operation in an address at
the National Palace in Mexico City.
Without specifically mentioning
how Guzman had already twice escaped from Mexican prisons, the Mexican
President said the recapture of Guzman ought to restore Mexicans' faith in
their government and justice system.Friday's announcement marked the third time
that Guzman was captured by Mexican authorities.
"The arrest today is
extremely important for the security institutions of the government," the
President said. "Today our institutions have demonstrated one more time
that our citizens can trust them, and our institutions are at the level that
has the strength and determination to complete any mission that is granted to
them."
Guzman's recapture represents a
major success in what has been an embarrassing ordeal for Mexico. For many,
"El Chapo" has been a symbol of the Mexican government's ineptitude
and corruption.
He has led one of the country's
most powerful, violent drug cartels and escaped maximum-security prisons not
once, but twice, the latest in July when he busted out through a hole into a
mile-long tunnel and then on to freedom
Last year's breakout spurred major
criticism about the Mexican government's ability to safeguard such a notorious
criminal, with some saying he should have been held in the United States.
U.S. officials were aware of the
operation to capture Guzman, according to a law enforcement official.
The Americans provided assistance
in the search, but his capture was the Mexican government's operation, the
official said.
An image provided Friday by an
unidentified source purports to show Joaquin "El Chapo"
Guzman Loera handcuffed after his detention in a place in Mexico not yet
revealed by authorities.
An image provided Friday by an
unidentified source purports to show Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman Loera
handcuffed after his detention in a place in Mexico not yet revealed by
authorities.
Mexican authorities were closing
in on him for at least 24 hours before special forces moved in. The official
said it's not a surprise El Chapo was located in Sinaloa.
"There was a belief he was in
Sinaloa. That was his refuge. We would have been surprised if it were anywhere
but Sinaloa," the official said.
Some U.S. officials were skeptical
that Guzman would ever be captured again, especially alive, given the amount of
protection he has in Mexico and his ability to escape prison twice, the
official said.
The U.S. Justice Department
previously sought extradition of El Chapo to the United States, and it is
likely that the Justice Department will try to do so again.
U.S. indicates Washington wants
'El Chapo' extradited
U.S. Sen. John McCain urged such a
transfer Friday when he tweeted, "Congratulations to the Mexican Navy on
the capture of El Chapo. Now let's extradite him to the US."
The raid began after a citizen
complained about armed people in a home, and when Mexican special forces went
to the scene, they were fired upon by alleged members of organized crime, the
Mexican navy said.On Friday, Mexican authorities released a video of a person
identified as Guzman, whose head was covered and who was being led by several
armed officers from a vehicle to an airplane. Authorities released a video of a
white structure where the raid occurred, and the footage showed several
weapons.In all, authorities seized four armored vehicles, eight rifles, a
handgun, ammunition, and a tube rocket launcher with two charges, the navy
said.
Led one of Mexico's richest, most
violent cartels
Born in Badiraguato in Sinaloa
state, Guzman started his career in the drug trade working for Miguel Angel
Felix Gallardo, according to Time magazine in 2009.
He started his own cartel in 1980,
expanding it into other states and even poaching some of his mentor's
territory.
That creation -- the Sinaloa
cartel -- soon became Mexico's most powerful and richest, a multibillion empire
that supplied much of the marijuana, cocaine and heroin sold on American
streets.
It was also one of the most
violent. U.S. indictments claim the organization used assassins and hit squads
to show its muscle.
The rivalry with other drug
cartels has spurred an ongoing drug war that's left thousands of Mexicans dead.
"He's the epitome of the
problem," Malcolm Beith, author of "The Last Narco," said of the
man whose nickname translates as "Shorty." "He's a poor kid who
had some family connections in the drug trade, no options, no real education
... (and) becomes a big-time drug lord."
Daring escapes create a legend
Authorities first caught up with
Guzman in 1993 in Guatemala. He was extradited to Mexico and sent to the Puente
Grande maximum-security prison following his conviction.
Yet even behind bars, Guzman lived
like a king, Beith said. Eight years later he escaped via a laundry cart.
His legend grew as he evaded
Mexican authorities, with stories of him helping the poor and paying everyone's
tab at restaurants.
Singers in Mexico and the United
States even hailed his exploits, with rapper Gucci Mane singing, "All I
wanna be is El Chapo. And when I meet him I'mma tell him bravo."
But these exploits ended in 2014
with his arrest in a predawn operation on his beachside hideaway in the Mexican
Pacific resort town of Mazatlan. Authorities found a shirtless Guzman, with an
AK-47 next to his bed, and his beauty-queen wife in a no-frills condo tower.
Intense manhunt after latest
escape
This time, Guzman was sent to
Altiplano Federal Prison in Almoloya de Juarez. But he escaped in July,
crawling through a hole in his cell block's shower area into a lighted,
ventilated tunnel, then to a half-built house.
He then traveled north about 140
kilometers (85 miles) to San Juan del Rio, where two small planes were awaiting
his arrival and took off from an airstrip, Attorney General Arely Gomez has
said.
At the time, the Mexican President
said he was "deeply troubled" by what he called "a very
unfortunate event."
"This represents, without a
doubt, an affront to the Mexican state," he said. "But also I am
confident that the institutions of the Mexican state, particularly those in
charge of public safety, are at the level, with the strength and determination,
to recapture this criminal."
Since his escape, Guzman had been
rumored to be many places, including as far away as Argentina. In October,
authorities revealed they were hot on Guzman's trail, only to have him slip out
of sight, though not before apparently breaking his leg.
Gomez said last fall that 34
people have been detained in connection with Guzman's breakout last year,
including the drug lord's brother-in-law.
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