Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lawyers’ fees for ‘El Chapo’ defense eyed

- By Tom Hays The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Private lawyers seeking to represent Joaquin

“El Chapo” Guzman in his U.S. drug-traffickin­g case failed to get assurances Monday that they’ll get paid, leaving the Mexican drug lord’s defense in limbo.

During a hearing in federal court in Brooklyn, U.S. District Judge Brian Cogan told the lawyers that if they took the case, there was no guarantee that prosecutor­s wouldn’t later seize their fees if they could show that the money came from his estimated $14 billion in drug profits.

“I’m not going to pressure the government to create a carve-out for counsel fees,” Cogan said.

Guzman smiled and waved at family members as he was led into the courtroom, but he didn’t speak during the brief appearance.

Afterward, the lawyers told reporters that they still hope to find a way to represent Guzman. They said they were waiting for him to consult with his sister on Thursday — the first jail visit he’s had by a family member since he was brought to the U.S. from Mexico in January.

“We are looking forward, desperatel­y, to come into this case and fight for Joaquin Guzman. … The guy has a constituti­onal right to the best counsel he can get,” said one of the lawyers, Jeffrey Lichtman.

Prosecutor­s have argued that taxpayers shouldn’t have to pay for his defense. But they also said in a letter to the court last week that the government will not “grant a blanket prospectiv­e assurance” that it won’t go after money spent on a private defense.

Michelle Gelernt, a public defender currently representi­ng Guzman, called that position “hypocritic­al.”

Lichtman is known for successful­ly defending John “Junior” Gotti, son of the notorious organized crime family boss, in a 2005 trial. The younger Gotti walked free after an acquittal on a securities fraud count and a mistrial on more serious racketeeri­ng counts.

The lawyer said he has met with Guzman on a weekly basis, hoping to defend him at a trial in April.

“He is charming, funny, highly intelligen­t. I enjoyed getting to know him. … I don’t judge someone by what I read in the papers,” Lichtman told The Associated Press last week.

Another candidate for the defense team, attorney Eduardo Balarezo, represente­d Mexican drug kingpin and former Guzman rival Alfredo Beltran Leyva in a separate U.S. drug case. Leyva was sentenced to life in prison earlier this year.

Guzman has pleaded not guilty to charges related to his drug traffickin­g operation.

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