“I could accept an extradition, but at the time I choose,” he said. “So about 300 or 400 years later — it will be a while.”
Chapo’s legal defense team isn’t waiting. The drug lord’s lawyer last week filed a preemptive appeal against any U.S. extradition attempts.
Meanwhile, in Chicago, U.S. federal prosecutors on Tuesday presented new indictments against the Sinaloa organization that Chapo once ran after a judge sentenced the Flores twins for facilitating the trafficking of $1.8 billion in drugs from 2005-2008.
Seems like Breaking Bad got this right. Photo via AP/U.S. Marshals Service
“They are the hub of the Sinaloa cartel here in Chicago,” U.S. Attorney Zachary Fardon said. “For years they ran what is the largest drug distribution network in the history of the city.”
Fardon said the Chicago-based investigation linked the Flores twins to Chapo Guzman. But the brothers apparently cut a deal with U.S. authorities to reduce their life sentences to 14 years.
The Mexican Attorney General is an outspoken critic of the U.S. negotiating plea bargains with cartel bosses, which is one of the reasons why he is so loath to extradite Chapo Guzman.
But now that the imprisoned twins have officially turned, they could provide new information for U.S. prosecutors to exert even more pressure on Mexico in the ongoing battle for the drug war’s top trophy.
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