This week, Zambada is expected to reveal he paid at least $6 million in hush money to the president of Mexico, Enrique Peña Nieto so that the Sinaloa Cartel could continue moving drugs through Mexico City, according to court transcripts made public Friday.
El Chapo’s lawyer: Mexican presidents are on cartel’s payroll
14
November, 2018
Brooklyn
prosecutors asked a judge Wednesday to strike explosive opening
statements made by Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman’s lawyer — in
which he claimed both former and current Mexican presidents are on
the drug cartel’s payroll.
“Opening
statements are not argument, and should be confined to statements
about the evidence,” US Attorney Richard P. Donoghue wrote to
federal Judge Brian Cogan in a letter filed early Wednesday.
In
his openings, which are expected to continue Wednesday, one of
Guzman’s lawyers, Jeffrey Lichtman, claimed that his client was the
victim of a vast conspiracy orchestrated to “scapegoat” the
accused kingpin and allow the drug trade in Mexico to go on
uninterrupted.
Lichtman
even asserted that longtime Guzman associate Ismael “El Mayo”
Zambada had “bribed” the entire Mexican government, including
President Enrique Peña Nieto, and was the true leader of the Sinaloa
Cartel.
Both
Peña Nieto and his presidential predecessor, Felipe Calderón,
decried the statements as blatantly false on Twitter on Tuesday.
Lichtman’s
claims failed to touch on the boatloads of evidence prosecutors told
jurors they have on Guzman, including statements in his own words
implicating him as a major cartel figure.
In
court Wednesday morning, Lichtman argued with Cogan while continuing
to claim that Guzman was the victim of a “frame-up by the
government.
“And
it’s been done in American courtrooms a thousand times a day,”
the lawyer complained.
Cogan
replied dryly, “No, that’s not hyperbolic at all.
“What
does it matter if the last two presidents took bribes if it’s not
tied to the defendant here?” the judge said.
He
added to Lichtman, “Your opening statements handed out a lot of
promissory notes that it’s not going to be able to cash.”
But
Cogan refused to strike the defense’s opening statements, instead
issuing a reminder to jurors that the arguments are not evidence.
“There
were some references in Mr. Lichtman’s opening statements to
conduct that might be considered outrageous,” he told the panel.
“The conduct of the government is for me to decide, not you.”
Guzman
stands accused of running a criminal enterprise, multiple counts of
importing cocaine, heroin and methamphetamine from Mexico into the
US, and other charges.
If
convicted, he faces life behind bars.
Joaquin
“El Chapo” Guzman once bragged that the greatest pleasure he’d
ever experienced was having his longtime enemy slaughtered as he was
detained by corrupt cops, according to a former cartel associate.
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