Los Angeles Times

‘EL CHAPO’ IS BACK BEHIND BARS

Mexican forces recapture Sinaloa cartel leader Joaquin Guzman in a deadly shootout.

- By Deborah Bonello, Cecilia Sanchez and Tracy Wilkinson

MEXICO CITY — In a deadly, predawn shootout, Mexican naval special forces on Friday captured Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, the world’s most sought-after drug lord and commander of a vast narcotics empire that stretches across continents.

“Mission accomplish­ed,” Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto announced on his Twitter account. “We’ve got him.”

Guzman, a billionair­e thanks to his Sinaloa cartel, which traffics in cocaine, marijuana, heroin and methamphet­amine, escaped from prison in July — for the second time — using an elaborate tunnel out of Mexico’s top maximum-security facility. He had been jailed for less than 17 months, and there was a great deal of doubt in Mexico that he’d ever see the inside of a cell again.

He was captured Friday in a firefight between his bodyguards and Mexican Marine special forces in the Sinaloa city of Los Mochis, on the Pacific coast and not far from his home, government officials said. Five of his associates were killed, six injured and several captured, the navy said. One marine was wounded.

The special forces were responding to a citizen’s tip regarding armed people in a home when they came under fire, the navy said. There were reports Guzman once again attempted to flee through the tunnels that have been his trademark, but they failed him this time.

Photograph­s released by officials and circulatin­g in Mexican media showed a chubby Guzman in a soiled tank top with his famously jet-black hair and mustache.

A rocket launcher, two armored vehicles and other weapons were seized in the operation, officials said. Video images showed Guzman,

head covered by a white towel, being trundled onto a small airplane and taken to Mexico City.

His escape last year was a major embarrassm­ent for the Peña Nieto government, exposing deep levels of corruption and Mexico’s inability to mete out justice. The U.S. government lamented Mexico’s refusal to extradite Guzman to the U.S., where he has been indicted in California, Illinois, New York and elsewhere because of his cartel’s expanding operations.

Washington is likely to revive extraditio­n requests now. It was the Guzman escape that prompted Peña Nieto to approve a number of extraditio­ns in recent months, something he had generally resisted doing.

Since that escape, Mexican officials have searched far and wide for Guzman, including in Guatemala and other countries where he is known to operate.

Authoritie­s worked “day and night,” Peña Nieto said, carrying out “months of intense, careful intelligen­ce work and criminal investigat­ion.”

Although details were not immediatel­y available, most high-profile captures have relied at least in part on U.S.-provided intelligen­ce, and that was likely in this case.

Guzman’s escape last year, on July 11, added to the folklore surroundin­g the legendary kingpin, who managed to pay for the digging of a tunnel from the shower inside his cell to a house nearly a mile away. The tunnel was equipped with lighting, ventilatio­n and a motorcycle.

Weeks of digging and the removal of tons of dirt apparently went undetected, or ignored, by prison guards, who also failed to promptly raise the alarm when Guzman disappeare­d from the closed-circuit camera that monitored his cell.

Several prison officials were eventually fired or jailed for their role in the escape.

In recent months, residents of Sinaloa state, the cradle of Guzman’s cartel, have reported seeing Mexican special forces conducting raids, often with collateral damage.

Guzman’s earlier arrest, in 1993, occurred in Guatemala. He was placed in what was then Mexico’s maximum-security prison until he escaped in 2001, purportedl­y by hiding in a laundry cart, as the U.S. was preparing to extradite him.

As a fugitive for the next decade, Guzman became one of the most powerful drug lords in the world. Forbes magazine once estimated his fortune at more than $1 billion. He expanded his empire across the U.S. and to Europe and Australia — his cartel killing tens of thousands of people in the process, for crossing it or getting in the way. In Mexico, local government and security officials were on his payroll.

On Feb. 22, 2014, after 13 years on the lam, he was tracked to an oceanfront apartment complex in the city of Mazatlan, also in Sinaloa, with his most recent wife, a former beauty queen, and twin daughters, who were born near Los Angeles in 2011.

At that time, he put up no resistance, and not a shot was fired.

In Friday’s shootout, however, he appeared to be much more a man on the run, surrounded by his gang and enmeshed in the violence of organized crime.

The U.S. government congratula­ted Mexico for the capture, with the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion calling it “a victory for the rule of law.”

“The arrest is a significan­t achievemen­t in our shared fight against transnatio­nal organized crime, violence, and drug traffickin­g,” the agency said in a statement.

“The DEA and Mexico have a strong partnershi­p and we will continue to support Mexico in its efforts to improve security for its citizens and continue to work together to respond to the evolving threats posed by transnatio­nal criminal organizati­ons.”

Atty. Gen. Loretta Lynch said: “Guzman’s latest attempt to escape has failed, and he will now have to answer for his alleged crimes, which have resulted in significan­t violence, suffering and corruption on multiple continents.”

 ?? Plaza de Armas ?? JOAQUIN GUZMAN, whose July escape from maximum-security prison was an embarrassm­ent for Mexico, was captured Friday in a firefight that killed five of his associates. Several others were captured as well.
Plaza de Armas JOAQUIN GUZMAN, whose July escape from maximum-security prison was an embarrassm­ent for Mexico, was captured Friday in a firefight that killed five of his associates. Several others were captured as well.
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