Latest News

Ismael 'El Mayo' Zambada, declared Mexican drug kingpin, to appear in United States court

Ismael El Mayo Zambada, the well-known alleged cofounder of the Sinaloa Cartel, is expected to appear in a U.S. court on Thursday after pleading not guilty recently to drug trafficking charges following his remarkable arrest.

Zambada is because of stand for a status conference before U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone in El Paso, Texas, federal court at 1 p.m. MDT (1900 GMT). Such hearings generally handle legal matters such as the disclosure of proof by prosecutors to the defense and preliminary scheduling.

In a major coup for U.S. law enforcement, the septuagenarian Zambada was taken in to U.S. custody on July 25 together with 38-year-old Joaquin Guzman Lopez, a child of the famous put behind bars drug trafficker Joaquin El Chapo Guzman, who co-founded the Sinaloa Cartel with Zambada.

Guzman Lopez pleaded not guilty to drug trafficking charges on Tuesday in Chicago federal court. El Chapo is serving a life sentence in an optimal security jail in Colorado.

The scenarios leading up to the arrests of Zambada and Guzman Lopez at the Dona Ana County International Jetport near El Paso remain murky.

U.S. officials briefed on the operation said recently that Guzman Lopez duped Zambada into boarding an aircraft by informing him they were going to scope out real estate in northern Mexico, just to fly north of the border - where Guzman Lopez planned to turn himself in, but Zambada did not.

Zambada's lawyer Frank Perez challenged that variation of occasions, asserting that Guzman Lopez and six men in military uniforms by force abducted his customer near Culiacan in Mexico's Sinaloa state and after that brought him to the United States against his will.

When inquired about Perez's assertions on Tuesday, Guzman Lopez's lawyer, Jeffrey Lichtman, said his client was not being implicated of kidnapping.

When the government implicates him, then I'll take notice, Lichtman told press reporters. When lawyers who are attempting to rating points with the media make allegations ... does not move the ball forward.

In the Texas case, which was brought in 2012, Zambada was charged with racketeering conspiracy and murder in furtherance of drug trafficking.

Prosecutors said cartel members under the leadership of Zambada and El Chapo kidnapped a Texas local in 2009 to answer for the loss of a taken cannabis shipment, and kidnapped a U.S. resident and two members of his family in 2010. Both victims were murdered, prosecutors said.

Zambada also faces charges in four other federal jurisdictions, including the Brooklyn borough of New York City, where El Chapo was attempted and convicted. In the Brooklyn case, Zambada is charged with conspiring to produce and distribute fentanyl, a lethal synthetic opioid fueling an epidemic throughout the U.S.

(source: Reuters)