The Palm Beach Post

Arizona aims to extradite trafficker­s from Mexico

- Stacey Barchenger Arizona Republic USA TODAY NETWORK

PHOENIX – Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes’ office will ramp up work to extradite drug trafficker­s from foreign nations as part of the Democratic prosecutor’s efforts to combat fentanyl coming into the state.

“We are going to reach into Mexico and bring the leaders of these drug cartels back to Arizona for prosecutio­n,” Mayes said. “We are going to disrupt, dismantle and try to destroy these drug traffickin­g organizati­ons.”

It’s an undertakin­g much easier said than done, as extraditio­n involves coordinati­on with the federal government and untangling a patchwork of internatio­nal treaties and foreign laws. Not to mention the investigat­ive work needed on the front end to put together witnesses and evidence to make a case.

Mayes has hired a veteran prosecutor, Adena Bernstein, to lead those efforts as well as serve as coordinato­r for her office’s response to the fentanyl crisis.

“The Attorney General’s Office has not seriously been involved in this type of extraditio­n work for about the last 14 or 15 years,” Mayes said last week at an event debuting a public service announceme­nt to warn Arizonans about the dangers of the deadly synthetic opioid. “But we have prioritize­d these cases and are ensuring that those guilty of traffickin­g and selling drugs do not evade prosecutio­n by fleeing the state or the country for the first time in a long, long time.”

That’s not to say extraditio­ns haven’t occurred at all, though they are hard to quantify.

It took about eight months after the January 2023 arrest of Ovidio “El Ratón” Guzmán, the son of former Sinaloa Cartel leader Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzmán, for the younger Guzmán who took over Sinaloa leadership to be extradited.

“This action is the most recent step in the Justice Department’s effort to attack every aspect of the cartel’s operations,” U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a Sept. 15 news release. “The fight against the cartels has involved incredible courage by United States law enforcemen­t and Mexican law enforcemen­t and military servicemem­bers, many of whom have given their lives in the pursuit of justice.”

In federal court in Chicago, Guzmán was arraigned and pleaded not guilty to charges in an indictment alleging that from 2008 to 2021, he engaged in a drug traffickin­g criminal enterprise, along with more fentanyl, money laundering and firearm conspiracy offenses.

The clash surroundin­g Guzmán’s Jan. 5, 2023, arrest in Culiacán, Mexico, resulted in nearly 30 deaths, on both the side of the Mexican authoritie­s and the cartel.

Bernstein came from the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office, where she had worked for much of the previous 25 years. She most recently handled cases involving internatio­nal extraditio­ns there.

Bernstein said a review of cases that could lead to extraditio­n includes seeing if any have passed a statute of limitation­s for prosecutio­n – either in Arizona or the foreign nation – and whether witnesses were still available to testify. She said there could be cases that may not be prosecuted because they were not acted upon sooner.

 ?? CHERYL EVANS/ARIZONA REPUBLIC FILE ?? Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes wants cartel leaders brought to the state for prosecutio­n.
CHERYL EVANS/ARIZONA REPUBLIC FILE Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes wants cartel leaders brought to the state for prosecutio­n.

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