Los Angeles Times

Grainy video appears to show kidnapping of ‘El Chapo’s’ son

- By Patrick J. McDonnell patrick.mcdonnell@latimes.com Cecilia Sanchez of The Times’ Mexico City bureau contribute­d to this report.

MEXICO CITY — Grainy footage aired on Mexican media appears to capture in cinematic fashion the moment when gunmen stormed an upscale restaurant and kidnapped six men — including Jesus Alfredo Guzman Salazar, a son of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, the imprisoned head of the Sinaloa cartel.

The website of Mexican news outlet El Universal late Wednesday posted the silent video, apparently taken from security cameras at the La Leche restaurant in the coastal resort city of Puerto Vallarta.

Earlier, Mexican media had shown still images from the video in a breach of the investigat­ion labeled “irresponsi­ble” by Eduardo Almaguer, prosecutor for Jalisco state, which includes Puerto Vallarta.

Also circulatin­g in the media was a photo, purportedl­y found in one of a number of seized cellphones, showing actress Kate del Castillo posing with Guzman Salazar. It was unclear when the photo was taken; its authentici­ty was not confirmed.

Last year, Del Castillo helped arrange a clandestin­e meeting in Mexico between the then-fugitive cartel boss and Sean Penn, the Hollywood actor and director. Penn later wrote about the encounter in an article for Rolling Stone magazine.

A major question in the case is how alleged high-level trafficker­s who routinely travel with teams of bodyguards could be nabbed by surprise without a shot being fired.

Initially, the security video shows restaurant patrons crouching for cover below a rectangula­r table as several armed assailants burst into the dining area, commando-style, about 1 a.m. Monday.

Glasses are scattered on the table at a celebrator­y get-together of 16 people, all linked to Guzman’s Sinaloa cartel, prosecutor­s say.

A second take, likely from a different security camera and apparently recorded earlier, shows a male patron standing near the door of the restaurant while chatting on his cellphone. He appears to look through the entrance and turn away just before attackers rush into the establishm­ent. Four gunmen pass by him before subduing the table full of revelers.

It is unclear whether the man on the phone was initially so distracted by his call that he was unaware of the assault — or was trying to be inconspicu­ous in the hope that he might be able to slip out the door. If his intent was the latter, the strategy failed.

A fifth assailant, wearing a baseball cap and wielding a rif le, stopped the man on the phone from exiting the restaurant; the gunman seems to direct a confederat­e to hold the man at gunpoint.

The video shifts to a scene of a number of captive men, hands behind their heads, being herded to the entrance of the restaurant and being forced to kneel.

All six kidnapping victims were taken away in a pair of SUVs, authoritie­s say. Their fates remain publicly unknown.

Seven attackers were involved in the storming of the restaurant, authoritie­s say. Prosecutor­s suspect a rival group, the Jalisco New Generation cartel, was behind the strike.

There has been speculatio­n in the Mexican press that one restaurant patron may have escaped, because authoritie­s say 16 were at the celebratio­n, yet only 15 have been publicly accounted for — the six men kidnapped and nine women who were not taken.

Authoritie­s have not confirmed reports that a second son of Guzman, Ivan Archivaldo Guzman Salazar, known as “El Chapito,” may have managed to slip away. Ivan Archivaldo is the older brother the kidnapped son.

U.S. authoritie­s have called the sons high-level operatives in the Sinaloa cartel and are seeking them on drug traffickin­g and other charges. Their father was recaptured in January after a spectacula­r jailbreak last year from a Mexican prison and is fighting extraditio­n to the United States.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States