*GUILTY* EL Chapo - Drug Cartel Chief, arrested Trafficking/conspiracy/firearms

Status
Not open for further replies.
  • #261
Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 2h2 hours ago
This is El Chapo's ex-wife Griselda, mother of four of El Chapo's kids. El Gordo testified that he took care of Griselda and the kids after El Chapo was captured in 1993, letting them live in one of his houses, giving them money, and making sure "they were always fine."

DtDGL0wXQAAOkJe.jpg

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  • #262
Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 3h3 hours ago
The narco-lifestyle described by Miguel Martinez at the Chapo trial today included even traffickers in prison. Once, Martinez said, he & Chapo went to see another trafficker, Juan (El Azul) Esparragoza, in jail. There was a mariachi band. Lobster, steak & pheasant were served.


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 2h2 hours ago
But with Chapo, luxury was never far from bloodshed. He went to see Azul to ask for permission to assassinate a rival who had killed two of his friends. The rival's gang had also slit the throat of the wife of one of Chapo's allies & had thrown their two young kids off a bridge.


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 3h3 hours ago
Chapo got permission for the hit, starting a cycle of violence. There were attacks, revenge attacks, and revenge attacks for the revenge attacks. It culminated in 1993 when a beloved Catholic cardinal, Juan Jesus Posadas Ocampo was killed at the Guadalajara airport.


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 3h3 hours ago
Martinez had new details about the assassination. He said a Tijuana cartel hit squad was at the airport & opened fire on Chapo, mistakenly killing the cardinal. Chapo escaped past a baggage carousel out to the street--all the while gripping a suitcase filled w/$600,000 in cash.


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 2h2 hours ago
Martinez asked him at point why he seemed so enamored by the violence in his war w/the Tijuana cartel.

"I would say to him, 'Why kill people?'" Martinez recalled. "And he answered me: 'Either your mom's going to cry or their mom's going to cry.'"


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 1h1 hour ago
It was quite the day at the El Chapo trial.

El Chapo’s Narco Spoils: a Beach House, a Zoo, a Fleet of Cash-Filled Jets


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 32m32 minutes ago
Today's testimony at the Chapo trial had it all: a $10 million beach house, a flight to Switzerland for a cellular rejuvenation cure and a better-than-"Goodfellas" account of a jailhouse narco-party w/a mariachi band and lobster and pheasant on the menu.

El Chapo’s Narco Spoils: a Beach House, a Zoo, a Fleet of Cash-Filled Jets
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  • #263
Prosecutors Seek Sanctions Against El Chapo Lawyers

November 27, 2018

"The judge at the U.S. trial of Mexican drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman has instructed defense lawyers to respond by week's end to prosecutors' complaints about them.

Brooklyn federal prosecutors are seeking sanctions against the defense based on allegations that unauthorized communication occurred between Guzman and his wife.

Before testimony resumed on Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Brian Cogan said he'll take up the issue next week after seeing the defense's response. He said any immediate concerns have already been resolved.

Guzman's wife, meanwhile, was back in her regular spot in the courtroom gallery....

Miguel Angel Martinez told the jury that he worked for Guzman in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and that the Sinaloa cartel paid $10 million in drug money bribes at least twice to Guillermo Gonzalez Calderoni, a top law enforcement official in Mexico City. Calderoni, in exchange, tipped off the cartel about investigations and offered other protections that helped keep Guzman from getting caught, Martinez testified."

Prosecutors Seek Sanctions Against El Chapo Lawyers
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

'El Chapo' trial witness talks about alleged drug lord's problems, perks

November 27, 2018

An informant at Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán Loera’s Brooklyn federal court trial Tuesday gave jurors a tour of the alleged drug lord’s problems and perks — from health issues for workers at a smuggling factory to his private zoo, Swiss cell injections and private reflections on the bloodshed he spawned.

Miguel Martínez Martínez, a top Guzmán aide from 1986 until 1998, portrayed the then-rising leader of Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel as a world traveler who gave his workers pricey gifts from a diamond studded Rolex to Thunderbirds, but relied on cloned phones and dozens of private wiretaps to keep himself safe and his affairs in order.

“He wanted to know what his people are thinking about him and what his enemies are thinking about him,” Martínez told jurors. “His enemies, his friends, his competitors, anyone he wanted to.”

“Girlfriends?” prosecutor Michael Robotti asked.

“Also,” Martínez answered....

Until Mexican police uncovered it in 1993, he testified, Guzmán’s organization used “clones” of the cans and boxes of a real chili pepper company — La Comadre, with a pigtailed little girl as the logo — to avoid FDA scrutiny, but he said packing 600 to 700 cans a day with kilo bricks was hard on employees.

“They got intoxicated because whenever you would push the kilo into the can, it would release cocaine into the air,” he said....
Martínez recalled the outbreak of a turf war with a rival cartel in Tijuana that followed the murder of two Guzmán friends. On the way to seek consent to start a war from an imprisoned senior leader known as "El Azul," he said, Guzmán listened intently to a song — a so-called narcocorrido — eulogizing one of his slain friends.

“He was crying,” Martínez testified....

Martínez will resume his testimony on Wednesday."

'El Chapo' trial witness talks about alleged drug lord's problems, perks | Newsday
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  • #264
El Chapo trial: Witness testifies on Joaquin Guzman's rise in the cartel

Nov 27, 2018

"Week 3 of El Chapo's trial began with testimony from his former friend and cartel member Miguel Angel Martinez, who spoke about Joaquin Guzman's life before the Sinaloa cartel. But what might be more interesting is what happened off the witness stand. Attorney Paul Batista joins CBSN with details."

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  • #265
El Chapo's lavish, jet-setting lifestyle revealed in court

Nov 27, 2018

"...The former lieutenant also recalled in court having to pay for El Chapo's multiple wives. Emma Coronel Aispuro, who married the drug kingpin in 2007, was said to be looking down during this portion of the testimony....

In opening statements, a defense attorney suggested Martinez couldn't be trusted as a witness, saying he had such a severe cocaine habit while he was working for Guzman that it damaged his nose. He admitted Tuesday that "unfortunately" he was using up to 4 grams of coke each day at the time, but hadn't touched it for 20 years."

Trial witness describes El Chapo's lavish lifestyle
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Witness Says ‘El Chapo’ Had Private Zoo, Four Jets

November 27, 2018

"BROOKLYN (CN) – Life was good for cocaine traffickers in the 1990s, according to a cooperating witness on the stand this week in the trial of Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.

“The best thing in the world,” a former member of the Sinaloa Cartel said of the business during that time. “Because we formed part of the cocaine boom.”

And Guzman spent his money lavishly, his former underling Miguel Angel Martinez told the jury. A self-described former “manager” of the Sinaloa Cartel, Martinez took the witness stand Monday and remained there on direct examination through Tuesday. He said he was a member of the cartel from 1986 until his arrest in 1998....

Prosecutors caused a stir with a filing in the early hours of Tuesday in which they said Guzman’s wife, 29-year-old Emma Coronel, had been caught on security footage with a cellphone in the courthouse. Recorders, cellphones and cameras are banned for most people entering the building, and a separate metal detector scans all trial attendees outside U.S. District Judge Brian Cogan’s courtroom....

Prosecutors’ motion for sanctions also included an accusation that defense counsel had used cellphones on their visits to Guzman to “facilitate unauthorized…and impermissible contact between the defendant and Ms. Coronel.”

Asked for comment on the accusations in the courthouse hallway Tuesday afternoon, defense lawyer Jeffrey Lichtman said, “It’s pure speculation.”...

The cartel had an unidentified U.S. Navy pilot making drug runs and bribed everyone from a high-ranking Mexican official to bank employees, Martinez testified....

Martinez said Tuesday he bribed bank employees to allow him to deposit huge amounts of the cartel’s laundered funds, which he brought to the bank in Samsonite suitcases.

Martinez also spoke about the various ways in which the cartel moved drugs. He was demoted from pilot after one incident where he nearly crashed the plane with Guzman on board, and the cartel leader’s bodyguard “wanted to kill me,” he said. But Guzman assigned him to open a fancy office for the cartel in a Mexico City office building, where they pretended to be attorneys..."

Witness Says ‘El Chapo’ Had Private Zoo, Four Jets
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  • #266
Wednesday, Nov. 28th:
*Trial continues (Day 8) (@ 9:30am ET) - NY – *Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera (El Chapo) (~61) arrested & charged with smuggled 155 tons of cocaine into U.S. Sinaloa drug cartel chief. Guzmán faces 17-count indictment charging him with drug trafficking, murder conspiracy & money laundering spanning nearly three decades. Plead not guilty to all charges. No bail.
Prosecutors say Guzmán ran Mexico's Sinaloa cartel from 1989 to 2014. In that time, they allege the cartel brought cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine & marijuana into the U.S. Prosecutors also charged Guzmán in connection with the assassinations of thousands of competitors. Plead not guilty to all charges. If convicted, he faces life in prison.
Trial expected to last several months. Also for trafficking, conspiracy & firearms in California, Arizona, Texas, Illinois, Florida & New York.

Skipping over Day 1 thru 6
11/27/18 Day 7: The government filed a motion last night asking the judge to impose sanctions on one of El Chapo's lawyers. The issue: El Chapo's wife used a cellphone in court, which prosecutors say led to "unuathorized" and "impermissible" contact with her husband State witnesses: Miguel Angel Martinez back on stand. Trial continues 11/28.

 
  • #267
Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 2h2 hours ago
It's Day 8 of the Chapo trial. Expect more testimony this morning from Miguel Angel Martinez aka El Gordo. Defense likely to cross-examine him later this afternoon. Stay turned for updates.

u1OjnWQo



Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 4h4 hours ago
The judge in the El Chapo trial has in recent days issued a series of rulings about what evidence will be heard in court. Much of it involves the bribery of Mexican police and politicians. The picture in still very fuzzy mainly because the rulings are heavily redacted.


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 4h4 hours ago
These rulings are in addition to one from last week (issued from the bench w/o much explanation) shutting down testimony about alleged bribes paid to Mexican presidents. Prosecutors still haven't issued a redacted form of their secret memo requesting that testimony not be heard.


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 4h4 hours ago
One of the new rulings talks about Cooperating Witness 1 who worked for Chapo from 2006-2014. The jury won't hear how CW1's family bribed a govt official some yrs ago. (It's not clear if that's the same $10,000 bribe paid to get CW1 out of jail. But that one won't be heard too.)


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 4h4 hours ago
However, the ruling says that Chapo's lawyers can ask CW1 about bribing officials with "quantities of cocaine."


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 4h4 hours ago
Then there's CW3 who "admits he bribed a prosecutor" to have a charge dismissed. The jury won't hear about that payoff because of its connections to...and here the ruling is redacted. We don't know to whom or to what that bribe is connected.


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 4h4 hours ago
But the defense will be allowed to ask CW3 about paying "the Mexican federal highway police" to escort a drug load. Chapo's lawyers can also ask CW3 about giving "a high-level Mexican politician a $300,000 interest-free loan."


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 4h4 hours ago
Judge Cogan's ruling is on based on pretty common legal reasoning. He says that much of the excluded evidence is prejudicial and would have a kind of over-killing "cumulative" effect.


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 4h4 hours ago
He seems to be saying that there will be enough evidence about official corruption to impeach the credibility of the witnesses. The jury doesn't need to hear all of it to get the point.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  • #268
Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 5h5 hours ago
Here's a fun sidebar conversation from yesterday where the prosecution and defense argue over whether "pistoleros" are on the cartel payroll or independent contractors. (h/t @Emily_Saul_)

DtF3ivrXQAEn4Ay.jpg
DtF3jgBXoAEZ4Fi.jpg

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  • #269
Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 27m27 minutes ago
Drama just now at the trial. Witness Miguel Angel Martinez was explaining his cooperation agreement with the government. He testified that he never wanted to testify against El Chapo. Asked why, he said this…


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 19m19 minutes ago
Miguel Angel Martinez aka El Gordo on why he didn't want to testify against El Chapo. He was cut off following an objection by the defense.

DtGz8byWwAAGpNC.jpg



Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 17m17 minutes ago
Here's a description of some of the attempted attacks on Martinez. Apparently he thinks Chapo was the one trying to have him killed. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/26/nyregion/el-chapo-

DtG0mv2XgAEzNXv.jpg


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 15m15 minutes ago
Martinez wasn't allowed to finish because the judge essentially said he could not give his opinion on whether or not Chapo was behind the assassination attempts. It could still come up during cross-examination if the defense questions his motivations for testifying.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 13m13 minutes ago
Martinez was extradited in 2001 and pled guilty to money laundering and conspiracy to import cocaine to the US. He was sentenced to 18 years but only served 6 because of his cooperation. He's now in witness protection.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 11m11 minutes ago
Martinez said he received $30K in financial support from the US government, plus another $43K for housing and travel to NYC to testify against Chapo. He also got work authorization and help finding job.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 8m8 minutes ago
After Martinez's remark about the attempts on his life, there was a pause as the judge spoke privately with the lawyers. Martinez remained on the witness stand and had a long staredown with El Chapo. It was an intense moment between the boss and his ex-lieutenant.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 6m6 minutes ago
Cross-examination of Martinez expected to begin after the lunch break. He'll likely be grilled about his cocaine addiction and lies that he told in the past to US law enforcement. The prosecution anticipated these would be used to discredit him and already asked about it.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  • #270
  • #271
Molly Crane-Newman‏Verified account @molcranenewman 48m48 minutes ago
#ElChapo trial day 8: Cooperating witness Miguel Angel Martinez Martinez made one thing clear in court this morning: he wishes he were any place but here.


Molly Crane-Newman‏Verified account @molcranenewman 46m46 minutes ago
Visibly nervous discussing the terms of his release from prison — he served 6 years of an 18-yr sentence — Martinez said he’s basically agreed to be a cooperating witness for life. Along with his freedom, the gov placed him and his family in the witness protection program.


Molly Crane-Newman‏Verified account @molcranenewman 46m46 minutes ago
“I have to cooperate always,” he said. “From what I understand, I always have to cooperate.”


Molly Crane-Newman‏Verified account @molcranenewman 46m46 minutes ago
Apprehensively looking over at El Chapo, he said he didn’t want to testify against him — but he had no choice.


Molly Crane-Newman‏Verified account @molcranenewman 45m45 minutes ago
“Sir, when I was fighting for my extradition, if I never mentioned Mr. Guzman then — never failed him, never stole from him, never betrayed him, I watched over his family — the only thing I received from him was four attempted attacks against me, without saying anything.”

Molly Crane-Newman‏Verified account @molcranenewman 44m44 minutes ago
"Can you imagine how many more I’m going to receive—” Then the defense objected and we recessed for lunch.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  • #272
Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 3h3 hours ago
In 1998, in jail and facing mounting legal fees, Miguel "El Gordo" Martinez made what turned out to be a dangerous mistake. The house where one of El Chapo's mistresses and her family were living was in his name. Martinez sold it out from under her to pay his lawyers.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
Martinez said the first attack was a stabbing in 1998, shortly after he was arrested. It was also after he sold a house that El Chapo's wife and kids were living in so that he could pay his legal bills.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
Martinez on the stabbing: It was the day of visits at the jail. There were three guys who came in and started stabbing me right in my cell… I was sent to the hospital dying." He was stabbed 7 times. Another attacker had a baseball bat. He had punctured lungs and intestines.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
After the first stabbing, Martinez was placed back in same cell block with his attackers. Second time he was stabbed 5-6 times in back while making a phone call. Two attackers. He suffered punctured lung and pancreas.



Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 3h3 hours ago
Two months later, three men accosted him in his cell, stabbing him seven times with blades, he said. His lung and intestines were perforated. After surgery, he suffered another knife attack in jail. This time his pancreas was cut.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
After second attack, Martinez was transferred to a new prison. When he arrived, he said the inmates were asking his shoe size because they were planning to take them from him when he was killed. He said there was a hit out on him.

Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
During the third attack he pulled from his cell by a guard to make a phone call. He said two inmates approached and "tried to stab me all over my face." The guard was able to fight them off. Prosecutors showed the jury pictures of scars on his torso and face.


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 3h3 hours ago
Martinez was moved to a different jail. One night, he heard a strange sound outside his cell window. It was a band, playing a corrido. He recognized it as one of Chapo's favorites. The song was going into death with nothing. The band played the song all night long, he said.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
The fourth attack against Martinez was the most dramatic. He was in a prison in Mexico City. He said a brass band showed up outside the prison in the middle of the night and started playing a song that Chapo liked over and over, at least 20 times.



Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
Martinez on the song: "It says to live your life intensely because the only thing you take with you when you leave is a bunch of the soil." This is a famous Mexican song called "Un Puño de Tierra" or "A Fist of Dirt"

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
Martinez said about an hour after the band stopped, a man came from outside the prison, got a pistol and grenades from a cell, and came to where Martinez was being held: "He put the pistol to [the guard's] head and pulled out the spring on the grenade and said open the cell."


Alan Feuer‏ @alanfeuer 3h3 hours ago
In the morning, the assassin showed up at his cell. He put a gun to the guard's head and ordered him to open the door. The guard refused: he didn't have a key, So the assassin tossed two hand grenades at Martinez's cell. He survived by shielding himself behind a toilet.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
Martinez said the guard refused to open the cell. The prison started to go on lockdown and the attacker panicked. He threw two grenades into Martinez's cell. Martinez hid behind the toilet and was uninjured by the blasts.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  • #273
Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
El Chapo's lawyer William Purpura started cross-examination after the attacks testimony, tried to raise doubts about his story. Asked why there was no official prison report or news coverage about the grenades. Also pointed out inconsistencies from Martinez's past statements.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
El Chapo's lawyer and Martinez also had this exchange about Chapo:

Purpura: "The bottom line is you hate him, no?"

Martinez: "No, I started hating Mr. Guzman when he betrayed me and ordered someone to kill me."

Purpura: "But you hate him?"

Martinez: "Yes."


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
More cross-examination happening now. Will update again after trial ends for the day.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 2h2 hours ago
Afternoon cross-examination was relatively uneventful. Purpura grilled Martinez about inconsistencies in his past statements to law enforcement. Standout moment was when he asked about his cocaine addiction.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 2h2 hours ago
Purpura noted that Martinez said he did 4 grams of cocaine a day for 15 years. He got out a 1-gram packet of Splenda and dumped it out on a projector. He asked: "You agree with me that in itself is a lot of cocaine?"


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 2h2 hours ago
Purpura then did the math and said if Martinez was doing 4 grams a day, he would have been doing nearly 1.5 kilos of cocaine per year — just by himself.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 2h2 hours ago
Chapo was loving this — he smiled as his lawyer made Martinez squirm and admit to lying in the past. Martinez was fidgeting, crossing his arms, and generally looking uncomfortable.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 2h2 hours ago
There was some additional testimony today about the killing of Cardinal Juan Posadas Ocampo in 1993. Will share that later. In the meantime, listen to the new episode of our @vicenews podcast. It's a good one. https://open.spotify.com/episode/2NtWvOzKo5WDhhKC4Ukz4m …
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  • #274
Alleged former 'El Chapo' lieutenant: Mexican drug lord tried to have me killed

Nov. 28, 2018

"NEW YORK – A former top lieutenant to Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán told a jury he feared testifying against the accused Mexican drug lord because he believed his ex-boss tried to have him killed in stabbing and grenade attacks.

Miguel Ángel Martínez held a federal courtroom transfixed Thursday as he recounted attacks he said took place in 1998, when he was in Mexican jails fighting efforts to extradite him to the United States for trial on drug trafficking charges.

"There were orders to kill me, four times," Martínez said, answering questions from Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Robotti.

"From whom?" asked Robotti.

"From Mr. Joaquín Guzmán," Martínez said.

The testimony from the man who described himself as Guzmán's order-taker appeared aimed at linking Guzmán with a murder conspiracy....

Martínez has been under federal government protection for 18 years, since he pleaded guilty to drug charges and agreed to become a cooperating witness in the U.S. battle against illegal drugs...."

Alleged former 'El Chapo' lieutenant: Mexican drug lord tried to have me killed
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

El Chapo Trial: Former Top Lieutenant Details Cartel Boss’s Downfall
Miguel Ángel Martínez Martínez, who knew El Chapo during his rise to power, also described the jet-setting glory days of the Sinaloa Cartel


Nov. 28, 2018

"...In a trial that will likely feature many blockbuster witnesses, Martínez stands out for his closeness to El Chapo during Guzmán’s rise to power. According to his testimony so far, he was there at a number of early moments when Guzmán and his top assistants were revolutionizing cocaine smuggling through the use of tunnels, planes and trains to ferry Colombian cocaine to its ravenous North American customers....

When he received a subpoena to testify against El Chapo, however, he said he was not happy to drop a dime on his former boss.

“When I was fighting my extradition, I never mentioned him,” he said. “I never failed him, I never stole from him, I never betrayed him. I watched over his family. And the only thing I ever received from him was four attempted attacks against me without saying anything.”

By the time court broke for lunch Wednesday, prosecutor Michael Robotti was still questioning Martinez about the terms of his cooperation agreement with the government, with cross-examination set to start Wednesday afternoon.

In its opening arguments, the defense team highlighted what it described as the untrustworthy nature of the government’s witnesses, and is likely to question Martinez about his claims to have never taken part in violence, and to hone in on his admitted drug use during the years about which he has testified."

El Chapo Trial: Former Top Lieutenant Details Cartel Boss’s Downfall – Rolling Stone
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Fear of El Chapo keeps star government witness awake at night, even though he's in witness protection program

Nov. 28, 2018

"Trouble dozing off at night? Imagine this guy’s life.

A former top lieutenant for Mexican drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán said Wednesday he suffers from extreme anxiety and sees a therapist ever since he started cooperating with the U.S. government and joined the federal witness protection program.

“I can’t sleep,” Miguel Angel Martinez testified at Guzmán's drug trafficking trial in federal court in Brooklyn.

Martinez told jurors he's chronically stressed out because he believes Guzmán’s henchmen have tried to kill him at least four times already....

In opening statements, a defense attorney suggested Martinez couldn't be trusted because he previously had a $4,000 a day cocaine habit that caused his nose to nearly collapse...."

Fear of El Chapo keeps star government witness awake at night, even though he's in witness protection program - NY Daily News
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Last edited:
  • #275
  • #276
What It's Like To Draw El Chapo From Court For A Living (HBO)

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  • #277
El Chapo's defense fights to keep alleged bigamy out of drug trial

Nov. 28, 2018

"Sounds like bigamy can join the long list of alleged crimes committed by Mexican drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán Loera.

During a Tuesday sidebar with the judge overseeing Guzmán’s drug-trafficking trial in Brooklyn, defense lawyer William Purpura objected to questions that might expose to the jury damaging details about his client’s multiple marriages.

“I’m not sure of the relevance of other wives. The fact that he might have three other wives at the same time he was married to Griselda, there’s no relevance to that,” Purpura said, according to a transcript of the conversation obtained by the Daily News.
Purpura was referring to Guzmán’s wife Griselda López Pérez, whom he married in the mid-80s after reportedly getting hitched to Alejandrina María Salazar Hernández in 1977. It’s not clear if he was married to a lover, Estela Peña...."

El Chapo's defense fights to keep alleged bigamy out of drug trial - NY Daily News

ny-1543434204-tuthhps5qi-snap-image


(El Chapo married Griselda López Pérez (right) in the mid-80s after reportedly getting hitched to Alejandrina María Salazar Hernández (left) in 1977. {Court Evidence])

ny-1543434100-ebpgf2jmj2-snap-image


(El Chapo and lover, Estela Peña, are pictured in an undated photo. [Court Evidence])

ny-1543434419-kvvku2y5w9-snap-image


(Emma Coronel, current wife of Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, leaves Brooklyn Federal Court following his second court appearance in Brooklyn on January 31, 2017. [Jesse Ward for New York Daily News])
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
  • #278
Thursday, Nov. 29th:
*Trial continues (Day 9) (@ 9:30am ET) - NY – *Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera (El Chapo) (~61) arrested & charged with smuggled 155 tons of cocaine into U.S. Sinaloa drug cartel chief. Guzmán faces 17-count indictment charging him with drug trafficking, murder conspiracy & money laundering spanning nearly three decades. Plead not guilty to all charges. No bail.
Prosecutors say Guzmán ran Mexico's Sinaloa cartel from 1989 to 2014. In that time, they allege the cartel brought cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine & marijuana into the U.S. Prosecutors also charged Guzmán in connection with the assassinations of thousands of competitors. Plead not guilty to all charges. If convicted, he faces life in prison.
Trial expected to last several months. Also for trafficking, conspiracy & firearms in California, Arizona, Texas, Illinois, Florida & New York.

Skipping over Day 1 thru 7.
11/28/18 Day 8: State witness: Miguel Ángel Martinez aka El Gordo. Trial continues on 11/29.
 
  • #279
  • #280
Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
Hello from Day 9 of the Chapo trial. Expecting more cross-examination this morning of Miguel Angel Martinez. We could get a new witness in the afternoon. Updates coming ASAP.


Keegan Hamilton‏Verified account @keegan_hamilton 3h3 hours ago
Here's a funny sidebar conversation from yesterday. Chapo's lawyer wants to use a sugar packet to show the jury how much is in a gram of cocaine. The prosecution says the jury probably knows that. The judge: "I hope not."

DtLCmtwWkAA1u-l.jpg




Molly Crane-Newman‏Verified account @molcranenewman 35m35 minutes ago
From one of yesterday’s sidebars. Judge Cogan’s nuggets of wisdom are getting me thru the long days.

DtLeJn5WoAAUjbJ.jpg


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
84
Guests online
2,741
Total visitors
2,825

Forum statistics

Threads
632,806
Messages
18,631,956
Members
243,299
Latest member
2Phaze
Back
Top