Toronto Star

Drug lord’s jailbreak may be a case of déjà vu

Prison ‘El Chapo’ escaped from a virtual replica of one he broke out of in 2001

- WILLIAM NEUMAN THE NEW YORK TIMES

MEXICO CITY— Ever since the powerful drug lord known as El Chapo escaped from a maximum-security prison through a kilometre-and-ahalf-long tunnel that opened right into the shower of his cell, Mexico has been wondering how his accomplice­s got their hands on the blueprints to operate with such pinpoint precision.

The answer could be quite simple: they may have had them for years.

It turns out the prison is a virtual replica of another lock-up that El Chapo, whose real name is Joaquin Guzman Loera, broke out of in 2001 in an almost equally audacious escape.

In other words, he essentiall­y broke out of the same prison twice.

Authoritie­s believe that for his first escape — by some accounts, he broke out by sneaking out in a laundry cart — Guzman had the help of a top prison security official who went on to become a trusted member of his Sinaloa cartel.

Investigat­ors think the confeder- ate, Damaso Lopez, may have taken a copy of the blueprints for the other prison when he left his job around the time of Guzman’s earlier escape, a senior Mexican law enforcemen­t official said.

And since the layout of the two prisons is virtually identical, and they were built within a few years of each other, those blueprints could have come in handy when planning this month’s breakout.

The official said that Lopez was now a prime suspect in the hunt for the people who planned and carried out this month’s escape. Beyond the possible blueprints, Lopez is believed to have close knowledge of the layout of the prisons and security procedures. The tunnel-makers may have also had the GPS co-ordinates for Guzman’s shower stall.

Authoritie­s have so far detained seven prison employees, including four whose job was to watch closedcirc­uit television monitors that showed Guzman’s cell and three guards. But Lopez remains at large.

Lopez was charged with drug-traffickin­g in a 2011 indictment filed in federal court in Virginia, and in 2013 he was described as Guzman’s righthand man and a senior lieutenant in the Sinaloa cartel in a statement by the U.S. Treasury Department.

The tunnel that Guzman used to escape included ventilatio­n and lighting and extended for about one and a half kilometres, under the prison walls, ending in a shaft that opened in a hole about 50 centimetre­s by 50 centimetre­s in the floor of the tiny shower of his cell.

There was little room for error. Being off by a foot or two would have meant failure.

The prison that he escaped from this month, about an hour’s drive from Mexico City, is known as Altiplano, or Federal Social Readaptati­on Center No. 1, because it was the first of a new set of modern prisons. Constructi­on was completed in1990, and the centre opened in 1991, according to a book by the prison’s first director, Juan Pablo de Tavira.

The prison Guzman escaped from in 2001 is Federal Social Readaptati­on Center No. 2, which was constructe­d from 1990 to 1993.

Athird prison with the same design near Matamoros on the border with Texas was finished in 1994.

The senior Mexican law enforcemen­t official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, confirmed that the design for the three prisons was the same.

 ?? MARCO UGARTE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A Mexican police officer holds a reward notice for informatio­n leading to the capture of drug lord Joaquin Guzman.
MARCO UGARTE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A Mexican police officer holds a reward notice for informatio­n leading to the capture of drug lord Joaquin Guzman.

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