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Under Mexican law I suspect it was unconstitutional to extradite El Chapo to the USA. At least that's how it seems from other articles I have read in the past in both English and Spanish newspapers.
Also I wonder if this was a deal cut by new President Trump to make Trump look like a hero on his first day in office? El Chapo is extradited on the day before Donald Trump becomes President? Last I wonder if all these charges the American government has against El Chapo are legal per American and international law. I don't think El Chapo has ever been to the USA. I guess that really doesn't matter, because El Chapo is locked in a federal jail cell in New York City.
Mexican drug lord 'El Chapo' to face judge in Brooklyn BY AIDAN MCLAUGHLIN NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Friday, January 20, 2017, 8:13 AM A convoy of trucks with sirens believed to be transporting the infamous Mexican drug czar Joaquin (El Chapo) Guzman pulled out of the Manhattan Correction Center around 7 a.m. Friday. He is due to face a federal judge in Brooklyn Friday afternoon after being extradited to the U.S. Thursday. He arrived at Manhattan Correction Complex around 11 p.m. Thursday after landing at Long Island MacArthur Airport on a flight from Ciudad Juarez, sources told the Daily News. Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Robert Capers will hold a press conference at 10 a.m. and Guzman is set to be arraigned around 2 p.m. The notorious Sinaloa cartel head had been fighting his extradition for more than a year. The U.S. Justice Department has been working with Mexican authorities to get him north of the border to face charges for 12 murder conspiracies, drug trafficking and money laundering. “The Justice Department extends its gratitude to the Government of Mexico for their extensive cooperation and assistance in securing the extradition of Guzman Loera to the United States,” the agency said in a statement Thursday. Guzman has become infamous for his Houdini-like escapes from Mexican prisons. The 59-year-old spent months on the run after a stunning escape from a high-security lockup in central Mexico in 2015. He used an adapted motorcycle on tracks in a mile-long tunnel to pedal his way to freedom. However, his time on the lam was short-lived as he was eventually recaptured following a bloody shootout. In 2001, Guzman — considered one of the most powerful drug traffickers in the world — escaped from another prison in a laundry cart.
U.S. Prosecutors Offer Glimpse of Case Against Mexican Drug Lord ‘El Chapo’ By ALAN FEUER and WILLIAM K. RASHBAUMJAN. 20, 2017 Hours after arriving by plane from Mexico, Joaquín Guzmán Loera, the drug lord known as El Chapo, was expected to appear in Federal District Court in Brooklyn on Friday to face charges of overseeing a narcotics empire that ran for decades, spanned much of North America and was protected by an army of assassins with a military-grade arsenal who, prosecutors said, did not hesitate to kill on his behalf. While most Americans were turned toward Washington and the inauguration of Donald J. Trump as president, prosecutors in the United States attorney’s office in Brooklyn held a news conference on Friday morning detailing the charges against Mr. Guzmán, who was flown out of Mexico on Thursday afternoon and arrived that night at MacArthur Airport on Long Island. Shortly after the plane touched down, videos emerged of a heavily armed motorcade transporting Mr. Guzmán to a New York federal jail. By Friday morning, prosecutors had released a memorandum laying out their arguments for keeping Mr. Guzmán in custody, noting his vast wealth, his penchant for violence and his habit of escaping Mexican prisons — most notably, the Altiplano prison, a maximum-security facility where he lived in isolation and under 24-hour surveillance, but nonetheless escaped after his associates dug a tunnel from a home a mile away directly into his shower. The government’s detention memo also gave an early glimpse of the case against Mr. Guzmán. It said that prosecutors planned to call several witnesses who would testify about the staggering scope of Mr. Guzmán’s criminal enterprise: including its multi-ton shipments of drugs in planes and submersibles and its numerous killings of witnesses, law enforcement agents, public officials and rival cartel members. The memo also said that the government had a vast array of physical evidence, including seized drug stashes and electronic surveillance recordings. The 26-page memorandum of law — supplemented with photographs of mountains of seized drugs and the planes, boats and submersibles used to smuggle them — read like a history of the modern narcotics business. Prosecutors contend that Mr. Guzmán transformed the drug trade, deploying savagery, a virtual army and the corrupting force of the unchecked profits of his business. The document tracks his progression from the 1980s, as a smuggler who transported Colombian cocaine to the United States and returned the profits to traffickers there so efficiently that he earned the nickname El Rápido, through the ’90s, when he began consolidating his control in Mexico. In the first decade of this century, Colombian traffickers faced increased enforcement of extradition laws at home, and thus greater threat of prosecution in the United States. They therefore ceded certain elements of the distribution networks in the United States to Mexican cartels, according to the memo. As Mr. Guzmán’s operations grew, prosecutors say, they became increasingly sophisticated. Mr. Guzmán also established a complex communications network to allow him to speak covertly with his growing empire without detection by law enforcement, according to the memo. This included “the use of encrypted networks, multiple insulating layers of go-betweens and ever-changing methods of communicating with his workers.” |