Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mexican kingpin pleads innocent

‘El Chapo’ to stay in jail in NYC that held terrorists, mobsters

- TOM HAYS AND JENNIFER PELTZ Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Verena Dobnik, Larry Neumeister and Jake Pearson of The Associated Press.

NEW YORK — Mexican drug lord and escape artist Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman was hauled into a U.S. courtroom Friday and then taken away to an ultra-secure jail that has held some of the world’s most dangerous terrorists and mobsters.

Holding his unshackled hands behind his back, Guzman, through his lawyers, entered a plea of innocence to drug traffickin­g and other charges at a Brooklyn courthouse ringed by squad cars, and officers with assault-style rifles and bomb-sniffing dogs.

“He’s a man known for a life of crime, violence, death and destructio­n, and now he’ll have to answer for that,” Robert Capers, the U.S. attorney in Brooklyn, said at a news conference.

The court appearance came hours after Guzman’s Thursday night extraditio­n from Mexico, where he had become something of a folk hero for two brazen prison escapes.

Guzman was ordered held without bond and was expected to be kept in a special Manhattan jail unit where other high-risk inmates — including Mafia boss John Gotti and several close associates of Osama bin Laden — spent their time awaiting trial.

“It is difficult to imagine another person with a greater risk of fleeing prosecutio­n,” prosecutor­s wrote in court papers.

Prosecutor­s described Guzman as the murderous overseer of a three-decade campaign of smuggling, brutality and corruption that made his Sinaloa drug cartel a fortune while fueling an epidemic of cocaine abuse and related violence in the U.S. in the 1980s and ’90s.

Guzman, who is in his 50s, faces the possibilit­y of life in prison if convicted. To get Mexico to hand him over, prosecutor­s agreed not to seek the death penalty. They also are demanding that he forfeit $14 billion in assets.

Outside court, Guzman defense attorney Michael Schneider said, “I haven’t seen any evidence that indicates to me that Mr. Guzman’s done anything wrong.” He said he would look into whether his client was extradited properly.

The U.S. had been trying to get custody of Guzman since he was first indicted in California in the early 1990s.

When Guzman got off a plane in New York, “as you looked into his eyes, you could see the surprise, you could see the shock, and to a certain extent, you could see the fear, as the realizatio­n kicked in that he’s about to face American justice,” said Angel Melendez, a U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agent.

While Guzman faces federal charges in several U.S. states, federal prosecutor­s in Brooklyn won the jockeying to get the case. The U.S. attorney’s office in Brooklyn has substantia­l experience prosecutin­g internatio­nal drug cartel cases and was once led by former U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch.

New York also boasts one of the most secure lockups in the United States, the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center in Lower Manhattan. The building is protected by steel barricades that can stop up to 7½ tons of speeding truck, and the area is watched by cameras capable of reading a newspaper a block away.

The jail’s inmates have included Ramzi Yousef, who was the architect of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, and multibilli­on-dollar Ponzi scheme king Bernard Madoff.

In the special high-security wing for the riskiest inmates, around a dozen prisoners spend 23 hours a day in roughly 20-by-12-foot cells, prohibited from communicat­ing with one another. Meals are eaten in cells, and exercise is in a recreation area specifical­ly for those inmates.

Guzman, whose nickname means Shorty, presided over a syndicate that funneled tons of cocaine from South America into the U.S. via tunnels, tanker trucks, planes, container ships, speedboats and even submarines, prosecutor­s said.

Initially arrested in 1993, he broke out of a maximum-security Mexican prison in 2001, apparently in a laundry cart, and became a folk legend among some Mexicans, immortaliz­ed in song.

He was caught in 2014 but escaped again, this time through a hole in his prison cell shower. A specially rigged motorcycle on rails whisked him to freedom through a mile long tunnel. He was recaptured in a January 2016 shootout that killed five associates.

 ?? AP/MARK LENNIHAN ?? U.S. Attorney Robert Capers, during a news conference Friday in New York, said Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman will have to answer for his crimes.
AP/MARK LENNIHAN U.S. Attorney Robert Capers, during a news conference Friday in New York, said Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman will have to answer for his crimes.

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