Infamous drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, who humiliated authorities when he tunneled out of a maximum-security prison in July, has been captured, Mexico’s president said Friday.
“Mission accomplished,” Enrique Pena Nieto said on Twitter. “We have him.”
Misión cumplida: lo tenemos. Quiero informar a los mexicanos que Joaquín Guzmán Loera ha sido detenido.
— Enrique Peña Nieto (@EPN) January 8, 2016
A law enforcement source confirmed the arrest to NBC News.
The Mexican Navy carried out the operation, according to leading Mexican newspaper El Universal. The navy, seen as less corruptible than the country’s police forces and army, has taken the lead in fighting the cartels.
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The navy said in a statement that marines, acting on a tip, stormed into a home in the town of Los Mochis before dawn. They were fired on from inside the building. Five suspects were killed and six others arrested, according to the statement. Michael Braun, the former DEA chief of operations, confirmed the details of the arrest to NBC News.
Braun said authorities told him they were planning to move El Chapo immediately to Mexico City for security reasons.
“It’s huge. I mean, he’s the number one drug-trafficking figure in history and he’s been probably the world’s biggest criminal fugitive,” a senior DEA official said. “And so it’s a huge win for the rule of law. No one is above it, and it’s great for the government of Mexico and the U.S., and the world.”
Guzman faces charges in numerous jurisdictions across the United States. While the Justice Department doesn’t comment on extradition requests, a senior official said: “I can confirm that it is the practice of the United States to seek extradition whenever defendants subject to U.S. charges are apprehended in another country.”
Guzman, leader of the Sinaloa drug cartel and a master of underground tunnels, set off a furious manhunt on July 11 when he casually slipped into a hole in his shower at Altiplano prison near Mexico City and fled through a mile-long tunnel outfitted with a motorbike that led to a residential construction site.
The Hollywood-style escape was a huge embarrassment for Mexican officials — in particular because Guzman and his organization were known for building tunnels under the U.S.-Mexico border. Guzman had escaped from prison once before, in 2001, purportedly hidden in a laundry cart.
Nieto on Friday thanked the agencies that he said conducted “months of careful and detailed intelligence work” and worked “for days and nights tirelessly to accomplish the mission that I have asked them to do.”
“Our institutions have shown once again that the citizens can trust these institutions,” Nieto said. “Our institutions are good enough. They have the determination.”
“Mexico is very proud,” Nieto said. “We’re going to continue to fight organized crime.”
Since the Altiplano escape, 23 prison officials and employees have been arrested, and several of Guzman’s Sinaloa underlings have been rounded up. The getaway damaged relations between Mexican and American anti-drug authorities, who had warned that Guzman’s associates would try to break him out of Altiplano.








