The New Zealand Herald

Cartels ‘bribed top security boss’

- Tom Hays

Mexico’s former top security chief and another law enforcemen­t official who once worked under the country’s new president-elect took millions of dollars in bribes from the notorious Sinaloa drug cartel in the mid-2000s, a witness testified at the US trial of kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.

Former cartel member Jesus Zambada made the allegation­s while testifying about what he described as widespread corruption among authoritie­s who were paid to keep their hands off the lucrative and violent drug operation.

During cross-examinatio­n, Zambada claimed he personally made at least US$6 million in hidden payments to the former federal security chief, Genaro Garcia Luna, on behalf of his older brother, cartel boss Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada. The cash was delivered during two meetings at a restaurant in Mexico between the start of 2005 and the end of 2007.

Cartel leaders had agreed that they would pool up to US$50 million to buy the protection of Garcia Luna, Jesus Zambada added when being asked about previous statements first made after he was flipped by US authoritie­s.

The witness also said a separate bribe of “a few million dollars” was made in 2005 to Gabriel Regino, who worked in the administra­tion of current President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador when he was Mayor of Mexico City.

There was no immediate response from Garcia Luna. Regino, now a private lawyer and law professor, wrote on Twitter, “I categorica­lly deny these accusation­s”.

Jurors in federal court in Brooklyn also heard testimony on from US agents about how they intercepte­d cocainesta­shed jalapeno cans and more than US$1 million in drug proceeds hidden in the panelling of a Ford Bronco used by Guzman’s brother.

The trial is off the rest of the week and is to resume next Tuesday.

Guzman, perhaps best known for escaping from Mexican prisons, has pleaded not guilty to drug-traffickin­g charges. If convicted, he faces life in prison.

His lawyers, saying he was either in prison or in hiding when prosecutor­s allege he oversaw a cartel that sent tonnes of cocaine into the US, have sought to portray Ismael Zambada as the actual boss.

 ??  ?? Jesus Zambada
Jesus Zambada

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