Mexico drug lord escapes from prison again

 

MEXICO CITY, July 12

Mexican drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman has escaped from a maximum-security prison for the second time in 14 years, sparking a massive manhunt on Sunday and dealing an embarrassing blow to the government.

The kingpin was last spotted by security cameras entering the shower area of the Altiplano prison, 90 km west of Mexico City, on Saturday night before disappearing, the National Security Commission said.

An alarm was issued after “he was not visible” for a while and his cell was empty, the commission said in a statement this morning.

“An operation to locate him was launched in the area and on roads of neighbouring states,” it said, adding that flights were suspended at the nearby Toluca airport.

Soldiers manned checkpoints at a toll booth of the Mexico City-Toluca highway, using flashlights to look at the faces of car passengers and searching car trunks and the backs of trucks.

The Altiplano prison in central Mexico State houses the country’s most notorious drug lords, murderers and kidnappers. The security commission did not have more details about the escape.

Guzman, 58, whose Sinaloa cartel shipped narcotics across the globe, was considered the world’s most wanted drug lord before his arrest.

His first break from prison was in 2001, when he slipped past authorities by hiding in a laundry cart. He had been arrested in Guatemala in 1993.

This time around, Guzman managed to give the slip after spending just 17 months in prison.

Marines had recaptured him in February 2014 in a pre-dawn raid in a condo in Mazatlan, a Pacific resort in Sinaloa state, with the help of the US Drug Enforcement Administration.

-His second escape is sure to embarrass the administration of President Enrique Pena Nieto, who was flying to France for a state visit when Guzman fled. The prison break will now certainly overshadow his trip.

Pena Nieto’s government had won praise for capturing the powerful kingpin, a diminutive but feared man whose nickname means “Shorty.”

After his last capture, the government had paraded Guzman in front of television cameras, showing the mustachioed mafia boss being frogmarched by two marines before taking him to prison on a helicopter.

The US government had hailed his capture as “landmark achievement” while some US prosecutors wanted to ask for his extradition, but Mexican officials insisted on trying him first.

Guzman’s Sinaloa cartel empire stretches along Mexico’s Pacific coast and deals drugs to the United States and as far as Europe and Asia.

‘Public Enemy Number One’

  • After his first escape on 2001, the United States had offered a $5 million reward for information leading to Joaquin Guzman’s arrest, while the city of Chicago — a popular destination for Sinaloa narcotics — declared him “Public Enemy Number One,” joining American gangster Al Capone as the only criminal to ever get the moniker
  • Folk ballads known as “narcocorridos,” tributes to drug capos, sang his praises
  • He used to be on Forbes magazine’s list of billionaires until the US publication said in 2013 that it could not verify his wealth and that it believed he was increasingly spending his fortune on protection
  • He married an 18-year-old beauty queen, Emma Coronel, in 2007 and is believed to have 10 children with various women
  • In Culiacan, authorities found a home with a bathtub that rose up electronically to open a secret tunnel that he used to escape the authorities before being caught in Mazatlan