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News from Around the Americas | January 2007
Mexican Drug Lords Appear in U.S. Court Juan A. Lozano - Associated Press
| Suspected Gulf cartel boss Osiel Cardenas (C) is escorted by members of Mexico's Federal Agency of Investigations in Mexico City in this handout photo taken January 20, 2007. Mexico has extradited four drug kingpins to the United States, striking a blow to warring cartels that killed 2,000 people last year and have turned large areas of the country into lawless badlands. (Reuters)
| With federal agents armed with automatic weapons standing guard on the courthouse roof, four drug lords who had been serving time in Mexican prisons were brought shackled into an American courtroom Monday to face drug and intimidation charges.
Among them was Osiel Cardenas-Guillen, believed to be one of the kingpins most responsible for violence along the Texas-Mexico border in recent years, said Karen Tandy, chief of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
"This is the first time in the history of Mexico that they have extradited to the United States what amounts to a clean sweep geographically of the cartel leadership," Tandy told reporters by teleconference from Washington.
The Mexican government was willing to extradite Cardenas-Guillen and the other suspected drug lords because they had been able to continue their drug operations from within prison in Mexico, not because of U.S. pressure, officials said.
They faced a federal magistrate under extraordinary security measures, including agents with automatic weapons perched on the roof and around the outside of the downtown federal building.
Besides Cardenas-Guillen, the group includes Palmas Salazar, the suspected former leader of the Sinaloa cartel, and brothers Ismael and Gilberto Higuera Guerrero, former chiefs in the Arellano-Felix cartel in Tijuana.
Cardenas-Guillen faces 17 counts of drug importing and distribution, as well as three charges of threatening a federal agent and one count of money laundering. He faces a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted.
Prosecutors said that the charges against Cardenas-Guillen originate in South Texas, but that he will be held in Houston, 350 miles from the border, out of concern for witness safety and border protection if held closer to Mexico.
Cardenas-Guillen's lawyer, Robert Yzaguirre, said he hadn't had any time yet with his client.
Along with the suspected drug kingpins, Mexico also extradited 11 people wanted in the United States on charges including murder, drug trafficking, kidnapping and sex crimes. They also appeared in court Monday.
Mexico has recently shown more willingness to extradite drug lords, even those facing life in prison. A record 63 were sent to the U.S. in 2006 alone. However, it refuses to extradite anyone who would face the death penalty, which is illegal in Mexico.
Mexican President Felipe Calderon pledged Monday to wage a permanent war on organized crime.
"This is a permanent fight in which, unfortunately, many have lost their lives," he said. "We are fighting without pause so that these sacrifices will not have been in vain."
Associated Press writer Mark Stevenson in Mexico City and photographer Pat Sullivan in Houston contributed to this report. |
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