Los Angeles Times

Hollywood hopes sunk ‘Chapo’

- By Tracy Wilkinson and Cecilia Sanchez

LOS MOCHIS, Mexico — His house was nothing special, a single-story, treeshroud­ed home in a middleclas­s neighborho­od in this seaside city. And there the world’s most sought-after drug kingpin hid for months until his capture in a deadly shootout.

Neighbors noticed his comings and goings, but without special attention. And then suddenly, the Mexican naval special forces descended Friday.

“It was like an action movie,” said Javier Torres, an 18-year-old student and neighbor. “The gunfire ... the helicopter­s woke us. There were lots of shouts.”

And with that, Sinaloa cartel commander Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman was captured, in a shootout that killed six of his associates. It was six months after he escaped from Mexico’s maximum-security prison through a tunnel he dug under his cell.

His ability to elude authoritie­s was due in large part to the support he has

among rank-and-file Mexicans. He was also able to pay off local government and military authoritie­s and spread largesse.

“It makes us sad because he is a good guy and gives us security,” said Los Mochis resident Mariana Ocampo, 21.

In the end, it wasn’t exhaustive Mexican detective work, nor sophistica­ted U.S. intelligen­ce, that exposed Guzman’s whereabout­s. It was ego and a chance at Hollywood.

Mexican Atty. Gen. Arely Gomez said Guzman had been in talks to produce a movie about his life.

“He establishe­d communicat­ion with actors and producers, which has formed a new line of investigat­ion,” she said in a latenight news conference as Guzman was being transporte­d from Los Mochis.

One of those contacts was apparently actor Sean Penn, who revealed in an article he wrote for Rolling Stone, published Saturday, that he had held a secret interview with Guzman in October at his jungle hide-out in Mexico.

Surrounded by the drug lord’s armed security troops, Guzman told Penn of his daring prison escape, and how he planned to make a movie about himself with Kate del Castillo, an actress who had famously played a drug trafficker in a Mexican soap opera.

“I supply more heroin, methamphet­amine, cocaine and marijuana than anybody else in the world,” he boasted. “I don’t want to be portrayed as a nun.”

Gomez said authoritie­s were able to track Guzman’s meetings with lawyers and other associates and were close to capturing him in October, apparently after his meeting with Penn.

He had been spied by helicopter, she said, but was accompanie­d by two women and a child, and so security forces decided not to engage.

Gomez also gave new details about Guzman’s summer escape, saying his brother-in-law, two pilots and tunnel engineers were involved. Once he made it through the tunnel, on a motorcycle speeding over specially built rails, he was whisked to an airfield where his airplane and a decoy took off in the night.

In a statement Saturday afternoon, the Mexican government announced the beginning of extraditio­n proceeding­s that would set the stage for Guzman to face trial in the United States.

The proceeding­s are in response to two formal extraditio­n requests from the U.S. government for crimes including murder, money laundering and arms possession, according to the statement.

“Guzman ... and his lawyers now have three days to file objections and 20 more days to prove them,” the Mexican government statement said.

If a judge decides to approve the extraditio­n, the request will be sent to Mexico’s Ministry of Foreign Relations, which can approve or deny it.

Guzman’s attorney, Juan Pablo Badillo, told the Milenio newspaper that the defense already has filed six motions to challenge extraditio­n requests.

Mexican media reported Saturday that Guzman, upon being captured, exclaimed: “Damn federales! They got us.”

 ?? Marco Ugarte
Associated Press ?? DRUG lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman was in talks to produce a movie about himself, an official said.
Marco Ugarte Associated Press DRUG lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman was in talks to produce a movie about himself, an official said.
 ?? Hector Guerrero
AFP/Getty Images ?? ONE OF THE HOMES searched in Los Mochis in Joaquin Guzman’s home state of Sinaloa. The home where the drug lord was staying was nothing special, just a single-story building in a middle-class neighborho­od.
Hector Guerrero AFP/Getty Images ONE OF THE HOMES searched in Los Mochis in Joaquin Guzman’s home state of Sinaloa. The home where the drug lord was staying was nothing special, just a single-story building in a middle-class neighborho­od.

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