Infamous Mexican drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, armed with a diamond-encrusted pistol, relied on rampant bloodshed and bribery to protect his multibillion-dollar drug smuggling operation and his hold on power, a former lieutenant for his cartel testified on Monday at Guzman’s US trial.
During his third day on the stand as a government witness, Jesus Zambada told the jury that the gunplay and cash payoffs were key components of the Sinaloa cartel’s business model.
Jurors were shown a photograph of the pistol decorated with Guzman’s initials as Zambada described the brutal way the cartel dealt with various violent threats and personal slights.
He said that he was told by his elder brother, Sinaloa cartel leader Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada, that a 2004 meeting between Guzman and a competitor named Rodolfo Fuentes ended poorly when Fuentes did not shake Guzman’s hand.
The brother claimed afterward that Guzman made it clear he wanted Fuentes dead, and ended up ordering his killing, he added.
Also assassinated were a corrupt police commander in 2008 for telling people “that he was going to finish off my brother and Chapo,” and another drug dealer who was struck down by “a hail of bullets from AK-47” that nearly took off his head, the witness said.
Jesus Zambada described being told by one of his paid informants within law enforcement that Mexican authorities were close to capturing Guzman, saying that it was suggested that the cartel should give a US$250,000 bribe to a ranking officer, after which: “The operation was aborted. There was no problem.”
The defense has argued that witnesses like Jesus Zambada are framing Guzman to win favor from the court in their own criminal cases.
During cross-examination, the defense sought to suggest that Jesus Zambada was minimizing his own role in the cartel and exaggerating that of Guzman as a mythical kingpin known for escaping Mexican prisons, when really he was in hiding most of his life of crime and not calling the shots.
Defense attorney William Purpura asked Jesus Zambada how it was possible that Guzman outranked him when there was evidence Guzman needed to go through him to get his supplies of cocaine.
For emphasis, the lawyer pulled down Jesus Zambada’s mug shot from a lower portion of a cartel organizational chart on display in the courtroom and held it above one of Guzman.
“How does that look?” Purpura asked.
“Fine,” the witness said with a smirk, before quickly qualifying the answer by adding: “I’m below him.”
Guzman, who was extradited to New York City early last year, has pleaded not guilty to drug trafficking charges. If convicted, he would face a possible life term.
Zambada was yesterday to resume testifying.
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