Chicago Sun-Times

WOMAN ACCUSED OF MOVING COCAINE IN CHICAGO FOR MEXICAN TRAFFICKER­S IS EXTRADITED TO UNITED STATES

- BY FRANK MAIN, STAFF REPORTER fmain@suntimes.com | @FrankMainN­ews

A woman accused of distributi­ng cocaine in Chicago has been extradited from Mexico to the United States, officials said Wednesday.

Norma Flores-Fernandez, 55, faces drug conspiracy charges in Newark, New Jersey, where she was indicted. Flores-Fernandez, part of a Guadalajar­a, Mexico, drug-traffickin­g organizati­on, coordinate­d the distributi­on of 15 kilograms of cocaine in Chicago and more than 5 kilograms of heroin in New Jersey, prosecutor­s said.

She was arrested Sept. 24 in Mexico at the request of U.S. officials.

The indictment didn’t identify the Guadalajar­a drug-traffickin­g group, but sources said they believe it’s tied to the powerful Jalisco New Generation cartel. The group distribute­d drugs throughout the United States in 2018 and 2019, prosecutor­s said.

Women in Latin America have increasing­ly been joining drug cartels — and facing criminal charges in the United States, experts say.

Among them is Guadalupe Fernandez Valencia, known as “La Patrona” or “the Boss,” a high-ranking Sinaloa cartel operative who got a 10-year sentence in federal court in Chicago in 2021 for smuggling thousands of pounds of drugs into the United States and sending the proceeds back to Mexico.

At her sentencing, Fernandez Valencia, 60 at the time, told the judge through an interprete­r, “I wish I could find the words to convince you of how sorry I am.”

Norma Flores-Fernandez joins a woman and three men charged in New Jersey with drug conspiracy in an investigat­ion by the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion.

Last year, Oscar Alberto Flores-Fernandez, 53, was sentenced to 87 months in prison, and Emilio Gutierrez-Martinez, 39, got 60 months. Laura Vanessa Diosa-Giraldo, 30, and Dario Camarillo, 60, have pleaded guilty and await sentencing.

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