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U.S. declines to pursue death penalty against trio of accused Mexican cartel kingpins

U.S. declines to pursue death penalty against trio of accused Mexican cartel kingpins

Federal authorities in the United States revealed Tuesday that they will not seek the death penalty against three reputed Mexican drug cartel leaders, including an alleged former partner of the infamous 'El Chapo' and the man accused of orchestrating the killing of a Drug Enforcement Administration agent.
Court filings showed decisions handed down in the trio of prosecutions, all being held in Brooklyn, N.Y.
The cases involve drug and conspiracy charges against Ismael 'El Mayo' Zambada, 75, charged with running a powerful faction of Mexico's Sinaloa cartel; Rafael Caro Quintero, 72, who allegedly masterminded the DEA agent's torture and murder in 1985; and Vicente Carrillo Fuentes, 62, also known as El Viceroy, who is under indictment as the ex-boss of the Juarez cartel.
Prosecutors from the Eastern District of New York filed a letter in each case 'to inform the Court and the defense that the Attorney General has authorized and directed this Office not to seek the death penalty.'
The decision comes despite calls by President Trump use capital punishment against drug traffickers and the U.S. government ratcheting up pressure against Mexico to dismantle organized crime groups and to staunch the flow of fentanyl and other illicit drugs across the border.
A White House spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
It's rare for the death penalty to be in play against high-level Mexican cartel figures. Mexico long ago abolished capital punishment and typically extradites its citizens on the condition they are spared death.
In Zambada's case, the standard restrictions did not apply because he was not extradited. Zambada was brought to the U.S. last July by a son of his longtime associate, Joaquín 'El Chapo' Guzmán. Zambada alleges he was ambushed and kidnapped in Sinaloa by Joaquín Guzmán López, who forced him onto an airplane bound for a small airport outside El Paso, Texas.
Zambada has pleaded not guilty to the charges against him and remains jailed in Brooklyn while his case proceeds. A court filing in June said prosecutors and the defense had 'discussed the potential for a resolution short of trial,' suggesting plea negotiations are underway.
Frank Perez, the lawyer representing Zambada, issued a statement Tuesday to The Times that said: 'We welcome the government's decision not to pursue the death penalty against our client. This marks an important step toward achieving a fair and just resolution.'
Federal authorities announced in May that Guzmán López, 39, an accused leader of the Sinaloa cartel faction known as 'Los Chapitos,' would also not face the death penalty. He faces an array of drug smuggling and conspiracy charges in a case pending before the federal court in Chicago.
Another son of El Chapo, Ovidio Guzmán López, 35, pleaded guilty to drug trafficking, money laundering and firearms charge last month in Chicago. Court filings show he has agreed to cooperate with U.S. authorities in other investigations.
Caro Quintero and Carrillo Fuentes were two of the biggest names among a group of 29 men handed over by Mexico to the U.S. in February. The unusual mass transfer was conducted outside the typical extradition process, which left open the possibility of the death penalty.
Reputed to be a founding member of Mexico's powerful Guadalajara cartel in the 1980s, Caro Quintero is allegedly responsible for the brutal slaying of DEA agent Enrique 'Kiki' Camarena 40 years ago.
The killing, portrayed on the Netlfix show 'Narcos: Mexico' and recounted in many books and documentaries, led to a fierce response by U.S. authorities, but Caro Quintero managed to elude justice for decades. Getting him on U.S. soil was portrayed a major victory by Trump administration officials.
Derek Maltz, the DEA chief in February, said in a statement that Caro Quintero had 'unleashed violence, destruction, and death across the United States and Mexico, has spent four decades atop DEA's most wanted fugitives list.'
Carrillo Fuentes is perhaps best known as the younger brother of another Mexican drug trafficker, Amado Carrillo Fuentes, the legendary 'Lord of the Skies,' who died in 1997. Once close to El Chapo, El Mayo and other Sinaloa cartel leaders, the younger Carrillo Funtes split off to form his own cartel in the city of Juárez, triggering years of bloody cartel warfare.
Kenneth J. Montgomery, the lawyer for Carrillo Fuentes, said Tuesday his client was 'extremely grateful' for the government's decision not to seek the death penalty.'I thought it was the right decision,' he said. 'In a civilized society, I don't think the death penalty should ever be an option.'
Trump has been an ardent supporter of capital punishment. In January, he signed an order that directs the attorney general to 'take all necessary and lawful action' to ensure that states have enough lethal injection drugs to carry out executions.
Trump's order directed the attorney general to pursue the death penalty in cases that involve the killing of law enforcement officers, among other factors. For years, Trump has loudly called for executing convicted drug traffickers. He reiterated the call for executions again in 2022 when announcing his intent to run again for president.
'We're going to be asking [that] everyone who sells drugs, gets caught selling drugs, to receive the death penalty for their heinous acts,' Trump said.
Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi lifted a moratorium on federal executions in February, reversing a policy that began under the Biden administration. In April, Bondi announced intentions to seek the death penalty against Luigi Mangione, the man charged with assassinating a UnitedHealthcare executive in New York City.
Bonnie Klapper, a former federal narcotics prosecutor in the Eastern District of New York, reacted with surprise upon learning that the Trump administration had decided not to pursue capital cases against the accused kingpins, particularly Caro Quintero.
Klapper, who is now a defense attorney, speculated that Mexico is strongly opposed to executions of its citizens and officials may have exerted diplomatic pressure to spare the lives of the three men, perhaps offering to send more kingpins in the future.
'While my initial reaction is one of shock given this administration's embrace of the death penalty, perhaps there's conversations taking place behind the scenes in which Mexico has said, 'If you want more of these, you can't ask to kill any of our citizens.''
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Trade preppers

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Border crisis shifts to Caribbean: Homeland Security fights silent war in Puerto Rico
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Fox News

timean hour ago

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Border crisis shifts to Caribbean: Homeland Security fights silent war in Puerto Rico

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Politico

time2 hours ago

  • Politico

Mexico was the only country to get a 90-day tariff reprieve from Trump. Here's why.

'Her discipline, message, dialogue, accommodating the U.S. on security and on migration have all helped,' said the former American official who worked on U.S.-Mexico issues during the first Trump administration. 'And given how Trump sometimes is given to just impromptu comments, it's kept them from getting zapped on something bigger just because Trump was angered by something.' And White House officials say Sheinbaum's willingness to cooperate on Trump's top priorities — migration and fentanyl — has bought her goodwill in the West Wing. In addition to her troop deployment and extradition efforts, Sheinbaum has ramped up drug enforcement by seizing fentanyl precursors, raiding opioid labs and arresting cartel members. Crucially, she has not issued retaliatory tariffs against the U.S. and has remained warm in how she talks about Mexico's relationship with its northern neighbor. In April, Canada announced countertariffs on American products, including 25 percent on certain autos, and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has spoken out forcefully against American tariffs, which he has called a 'direct attack' on his country. So far, the White House appears appreciative of Sheinbaum's approach. 'They've been more forthright,' said a second White House official. 'They've handled this better.' Sheinbaum has been deliberate in her relationship with Trump. She has received counsel on how to approach the U.S. president from both her predecessor and mentor, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who had a warm relationship with Trump during his first term, and prominent Mexican business leaders with ties to Trump world, according to three of the former U.S. and Mexican officials. Sheinbaum, a physicist who completed her postdoc at the University of California, Berkeley, speaks English, including during calls with Trump. She has also earned a reputation for the data-driven approach she takes to their conversations, including citing the U.S.'s own data to show Trump that seizures of fentanyl at the U.S.-Mexico border have dropped dramatically. 'If you look at what the Mexican government has put out, and what she has said herself in the press conferences that she gives, she has been crystal clear about what Mexico is doing on the number of issues that affect both Mexico and the U.S. with clear data and clear follow up,' said one Mexican official. 'It's a clear roadmap with clear benchmarks and clear indicators, and I think that's a language that Americans speak.'

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