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Relatives of El Chapo enter US as part of ‘negotiation,' Mexico's security secretary says

Relatives of El Chapo enter US as part of ‘negotiation,' Mexico's security secretary says

Yahoo13-05-2025

Several family members of Mexican drug trafficker Joaquín 'El Chapo' Guzmán have entered the United States as part of negotiations in a case against one of his sons, Mexico's Security Secretary Omar García Harfuch told the Mexican network Radio Fórmula on Tuesday.
El Chapo's son Ovidio Guzmán López is facing drug trafficking charges in the US over his alleged role in the Sinaloa Cartel, which his father co-founded. Ovidio was extradited to the US in September 2023, several months after Mexican authorities arrested him in a large-scale operation that resulted in at least 29 deaths.
Days after his extradition, he pleaded not guilty to the drug trafficking charges in a US court. But last week, he reached an agreement to change his plea, according to a court document reviewed by CNN. The document did not specify details of the agreement.
'It's clear that with his family going to the United States, it's connected to this negotiation or plea deal opportunity provided by the (US) Department of Justice itself,' García Harfuch told Radio Fórmula.
Several Mexican media outlets reported Tuesday that 17 of Ovidio's relatives had crossed the border into the United States. CNN has requested more information from the Mexican Ministry of Security and Citizen Protection, as well as the US Department of Justice.
García Harfuch added that the relatives who left the country were not wanted by Mexican authorities.
Ovidio is one of four sons of El Chapo who have been charged in the US with various crimes over their alleged roles in the Sinaloa Cartel.
Collectively known as 'Los Chapitos,' the brothers are thought to have been brought into the cartel as teenagers to learn the ins and outs of the organization, according to the think tank InSight Crime. Their roles became more prominent around the mid-2010s, roughly when their father was captured and extradited to the United States.
Another son of El Chapo, Joaquín Guzmán López, is also in US custody. He was arrested in July 2024 when he flew into the United States on a private plane from Mexico alongside Ismael 'El Mayo' Zambada, a co-founder of the cartel who the brothers had been at odds with.
Joaquín had allegedly organized his arrest and that of El Mayo by luring him on the flight to examine a piece of land he thought was in Mexico, an official familiar with the operation had told CNN at the time. Instead, the plane landed in El Paso, Texas, where federal agents arrested them.
Mexico Secretary of Security Rosa Icela Rodriguez said in August that Joaquín had reached an agreement with his brother Ovidio 'so that they would go to the United States to surrender.'
However, an attorney for Ovidio told CNN that Rodriguez's claim was 'a complete and utter fabrication.' An attorney for El Mayo said he 'neither surrendered nor negotiated any terms with the US government' and described the flight to the US as a violent kidnapping.
Two other sons of El Chapo, Ivan Archivaldo and Jesus Alfredo Guzmán Salazar, are still at large. The US has accused them of leading large-scale drug trafficking operations for the cartel and has issued $10 million bounties for information leading to each of their arrests.
Mexican forces had previously arrested Ovidio in a 2019 operation that ended in failure. Shortly after he was detained in October of that year, the cartel quickly mobilized dozens of gunmen to battle Mexican authorities and try to free him.
Ovidio was eventually released on the orders of then-President Andrés Manuel López Obrador to stop the violence. He then went into hiding until his second arrest and eventual extradition in 2023.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
CNN's Karol Suarez contributed to this report.

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Images of unrest, political spin distort the reality on the ground in L.A.
Images of unrest, political spin distort the reality on the ground in L.A.

Los Angeles Times

time25 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Images of unrest, political spin distort the reality on the ground in L.A.

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Advocates organizing to support immigrant families
Advocates organizing to support immigrant families

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Advocates organizing to support immigrant families

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Illegal migrant rioter charged with hurling molotov at LA cops after chilling footage captured him stalking police
Illegal migrant rioter charged with hurling molotov at LA cops after chilling footage captured him stalking police

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Illegal migrant rioter charged with hurling molotov at LA cops after chilling footage captured him stalking police

An illegal migrant from Mexico is accused of throwing a Molotov cocktail at cops during the anti-ICE riots in Los Angeles last weekend — and he'd already been deported from the US once before. Emiliano Garduno-Galvez now faces an attempted murder charge after being nabbed by Immigration and Customs Enforcement Monday, according to the Department of Homeland Security. 4 Ominous footage shows Emiliano Garduno-Galvez flicking a lighter, as if to test that it's working before the alleged attack. Department of Homeland Security Ominous video footage released by ICE shows the Mexican migrant lurking around a tree wearing a black hoodie and face mask with what appeared to be a Molotov cocktail at his feet on Saturday, according to ICE At one point he flicks a lighter, as if to test that it's working, according to the footage. Police were seen trying to push rioters away from the area before Garduno-Galvez allegedly chucked the explosive at them, ICE said. Assistant DHS Secretary Tricia McLaughlin emphasized that 'these are the types of criminal illegal aliens that rioters are fighting to protect,' in a statement Wednesday. 4 Emiliano Garduno-Galvez was previously deported from the US. Department of Homeland Security She added: 'The Los Angeles rioters will not stop us or slow us down. And if you lay a hand on a law enforcement officer, you will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.' 4 Emiliano Garduno-Galvez, left, appears in video footage taken before the attack. Department of Homeland Security 4 ICE agents arresting a man in Los Angeles. @PressSec / X The Mexican illegal migrant also had a rap sheet that includes two arrests last year for a DUI in Long Beach and grand theft in Anaheim. A DHS official told The Post that local officials didn't honor previous detainers to let ICE take Garduno Galvez into custody after his previous arrests. Anti-ICE protests broke out in LA Friday after immigration agents raided multiple workplaces and hauled of illegal migrants, but kicked off in earnest on Saturday. Rioters threw rocks and molotov cocktails at federal agents and local cops. Protesters later began showing up at multiple locations across the city to block ICE raids, while picketing at the agency's downtown detention center. The protests, however, quickly turned violent as rioters began burning cars, shutting down highways and looting storefronts.

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