Dayton Daily News

Lawyer: El Chapo whisked away hours after sentencing

- By Tom Hays

NEWYORK— Only hours after receiving a life sentence, con- victed Mexican drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman was forced to make a sudden departure to the highest-security prison in the U.S. to serve the term, his lawyer said Thursday.

A government helicopter whisked the narco, notorious for his daring jailbreaks, out of New York City on Wednesday after the sentencing in federal court in Brooklyn, said defense attorney Jeffrey Lichtman. The lawyer said he was informed that his client was en route to the supermax facility in Flor- ence, Colorado.

For most defendants, there’s a lag between sen- tencing and a decision by the Bureau of Prisons on where to house them. In Guzman’s case, U.S. District Judge Brian Cogan agreed at the close of his sentencing to recommend to the bureau that it let Guzman stay at a federal jail in Manhattan for two more months to help his lawyers mount an appeal.

It’s now clear that behind the scenes, there already was a plan in place “to get him out of the city as soon as possible,” Lichtman said.

Prison officials and pros- ecutors wouldn’t talk about Guzman’s whereabout­s Thursday.

The 62-year-old Guzman had been the subject of extreme security measures carrying an untold cost ever since his extraditio­n to the U.S. in 2017 to face drug-traffickin­g charges. Authoritie­s were determined to prevent any repeat of Guzman’s legendary jailbreaks in Mexico, including the one in 2015 involving a mile-long (1.6 kilometer-long) tunnel dug to the shower in his cell.

Guzman was put in solitary confinemen­t in a high-security wing of the Manhattan jail that has housed terrorists and mobsters.

“I drink unsanitary water, no air or sunlight, and the air pumped in makes my ears and throat hurt,” he said at sentencing. “This has been psychologi­cal, emotional and mental torture 24 hours a day.”

For pretrial hearings in Brooklyn, authoritie­s transporti­ng Guzman shut down the Brooklyn Bridge to make way for a police motorcade that includes a SWAT team and an ambulance, all tracked by helicopter­s.

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