Khaleej Times

Mexican drug lord ‘El Chapo’ faces US trial

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I supply more heroin, meth, cocaine and marijuana than anybody else in the world.”

Guzman, Mexican drug lord

new york — The trial of extradited Mexican drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman is set to begin on Monday in federal court in Brooklyn, where he is facing drug traffickin­g and conspiracy charges.

Prosecutor­s, defence lawyers and US District Judge Brian Cogan will start by choosing jurors for what is expected to be a four-month trial. In a sign of the level of attention on the case, and the notoriety of the defendant, the jury will be kept anonymous.

Guzman, 61, formerly led the Sinaloa Cartel, named after its base in the Mexican state of Sinaloa. US authoritie­s have described the group as one of the most powerful drug traffickin­g organisati­ons in the world.

Guzman’s nickname, a reference to his five foot, six inch height, is often translated in English as “Shorty.”

He was extradited to the United States from Mexico on January 19, 2017, after escaping twice from Mexican prisons.

A Mexican official said at the time that the move was a show of goodwill to incoming US President Donald Trump, who was inaugurate­d the next day, though Alberto Elias Beltran, Mexico’s assistant attorney general for internatio­nal affairs, denied any connection.

US prosecutor­s say that as the head of the Sinaloa Cartel since 2003, Guzman directed the movement of multi-ton shipments of drugs including heroin, cocaine, marijuana and methamphet­amine across borders and into the United States. If convicted, Guzman faces life in prison.

According to court filings, prosecutio­n witnesses will include former Sinaloa Cartel members and others involved in the drug trade who are now cooperatin­g with the US government. Prosecutor­s have so far avoided naming the witnesses, saying that doing so would put them in danger. Some are expected to testify under aliases.

Although the charges in the case all relate to drug traffickin­g, prosecutor­s are also expected to introduce evidence that Guzman was involved in multiple murder plots in the course of his career, including in wars with rival cartels.

Guzman’s lawyers have so far given few hints about their planned defence. Eduardo Balarezo, one of the lawyers, said in a court filing that he will seek to prove that Guzman was merely a “lieutenant,” acting at the direction of others.

Mexican authoritie­s captured Guzman and an associate in January 2016 fleeing a raid on a house where he had been staying in northwest Mexico.

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