Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mexico’s president: Drug lord release invites scorn

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MEXICO CITY — Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador worried Monday that yet another shadowy release of a drug lord is about to make Mexico a target of internatio­nal ridicule.

Almost eight years ago, drug lord Rafael Caro Quintero walked out of a Mexican prison late at night with an improperly ordered release. He has since returned to drug traffickin­g and unleashed bloody turf battles in northern Mexico border state of Sonora.

On Saturday, another top capo of the Sinaloa cartel was about to walk in similar circumstan­ces.

Hector “El Guero” Palma was hours away from freedom after a judge’s secretary sent a letter — on a Saturday and national holiday — saying the government had to release him immediatel­y after he was acquitted on organized crime charges.

“This is a matter of national import,” Lopez Obrador said Monday. “Imagine the suspicion, the jokes, the memes.”

“Something similar happened when Mr. Caro Quintero was released,” Lopez Obrador recalled. “They accused us from abroad, accused the government of complicity. No foreign government should accuse the Mexican government, and we shouldn’t give them a pretext to do that.”

On Sunday, the judge sent another notificati­on saying Palma had to be released by 4 p.m. Lopez Obrador said prosecutor­s won a 48-hour extension to look for any outstandin­g warrants that could justify holding him. That runs out on Tuesday. The president has said that if none can be found, Palma should be released.

Mexico is beginning to earn a reputation as a government that, under Lopez Obrador, has released more drug lords than it has captured, part of the president’s stated policy of no longer detaining drug lords to avoid violence.

Former U.S. Ambassador Christophe­r Landau said in April that Lopez Obrador views the fight against drug cartels “as a distractio­n … So he has basically adopted an agenda of a pretty laissez-faire attitude towards them, which is pretty troubling to our government, obviously.”

Lopez Obrador’s policy hasn’t accomplish­ed much in decreasing drug violence in Mexico, and Palma’s release, like Caro Quintero’s, may only cause more bloodshed.

Palma was a founder and leader of the Sinaloa cartel, along with imprisoned drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.

Palma and Guzman drew unwanted attention in 1993 when a Roman Catholic cardinal was killed in a shootout between Sinaloa gunmen and the rival Arellano Felix gang at an airport in Guadalajar­a. The gunmen apparently mistook the cardinal’s luxury car for that of a rival.

Palma was arrested in Mexico in 1995 and served 12 years in Mexico on bribery and weapons charges before he was extradited to the United States in 2007, where he served nine years of a 16-year sentence for cocaine traffickin­g, before being sent back to Mexico, where he was held for trial on the organized crime charges that he was acquitted of last week.

Mexico’s judicial system is already in low esteem, and the late-night or weekend release orders don’t help its reputation for alleged corruption. Lopez Obrador said he would push for a reform so that such release orders couldn’t be issued on weekends.

While Caro Quintero’s release predates Lopez Obrador’s administra­tion — the president took office in December 2018 — the president has recently said it was “justified” because supposedly no verdict had been handed down against the drug lord after 27 years in jail.

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