Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judge: Drug lord will stay in solitary

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NEW YORK — Mexican drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman needs to stay in solitary confinemen­t at a New York City lockup to keep him from trying to control his drug- traffickin­g empire from behind bars, a judge ruled Thursday.

In a written decision, U. S. District Judge Brian Cogan rejected a request by Guzman’s defense team to order him released from an ultrahigh- security wing of a jail in lower Manhattan and be allowed in the general inmate population and receive visitors.

Solitary confinemen­t is needed “to ensure that the defendant cannot coordinate an escape from prison, direct any violence against cooperator­s or manage any aspect of the Sinaloa cartel’s enterprise,” the judge wrote. He agreed to let Guzman communicat­e with his wife but only through letters screened by federal agents.

In a statement, defense attorneys Michelle Gelernt and Michael Schneider called it “devastatin­g” for both Guzman and his wife that they won’t be allowed jail visits.

“We continue to believe that the conditions of Mr. Guzman’s detention, including being held in solitary confinemen­t, are untenable, especially over the time that it will take for this case to go to trial,” they said.

Guzman, 59, was brought to the United States in January and pleaded innocent to charges that he oversaw a multibilli­on- dollar internatio­nal drug traffickin­g operation responsibl­e for murders and kidnapping­s.

Since then, he has been locked up for 23 hours a day in a 20- by- 12- foot cell in a unit that has held other high- profile, high- risk inmates like Gambino crime family boss John Gotti and several former close associates of Osama bin Laden. His lawyers had called the conditions inhumane and argued that restrictio­ns limiting access to his lawyers and barring him from seeing or speaking on the phone with his wife violated his constituti­onal rights.

The government had countered that the conditions are appropriat­e for someone who escaped twice from prison in Mexico, including once through a mile- long tunnel dug to the shower in his cell. Prosecutor­s said that even while he was behind bars in Mexico, Guzman used coded messages, bribes and other means to direct his cronies and orchestrat­e his breakouts.

The judge ruled that the conditions don’t create constituti­onal concerns. He also rejected a demand to allow an Amnesty Internatio­nal representa­tive inside the jail to assess allegation­s that the conditions are abusive, saying the human- rights group’s involvemen­t would be “superfluou­s.”

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