Where is El Chapo now and what’s his net worth? Mexican drug lord Joaquin Guzman behind the Sinaloa cartel – The Sun

JOAQUIN 'El Chapo' Guzman is a Mexican drug lord and former leader of the Sinaloa Cartel who built an international criminal empire trafficking cocaine, heroin, and marijuana.

He was caged for life in 2019 after he was found guilty of orchestrating the exploits of the murderous gang during his career, spanning over three decades.

Who is Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman?

Joaquin Archivaldo Guzman Loera is known by various aliases, including “El Chapo” and “El Rapido”.

El Chapo – which means "shorty" in English – was a moniker attributed in reference to his height.

The 63-year-old headed the Sinaloa Cartel, a criminal organization named after the Mexican Pacific coast, after his humble beginnings in a poor farming family.

El Chapo became the country's top drug lord in 2003 after the arrest of his rival Osiel Cardenas of the Gulf Cartel.

He was considered the "most powerful drug trafficker in the world" by the US Department of the Treasury and "one of the most powerful people in the world" by Forbes between 2009 and 2013.

Guzman was a "principal leader of the Sinaloa Cartel, a Mexico-based international drug trafficking organisation responsible for importing and distributing more than a million kilograms of cocaine, marijuana, methamphetamine and heroin in the US," according to the US Office of Public Affairs,

He earned the nickname "El Rapido" for his speed at transporting drugs from Mexico to America for the Colombian cartels.

The cartel transported narcotics into the US by fishing boats, submarines, carbon fibre airplanes, trains with secret compartments and even transnational underground tunnels.

After the narcotics arrived in America, they were sold to wholesale distributors across the country, across states such as New York, Miami, Atlanta, Chicago, Arizona, and Los Angeles.

Guzman used elaborate schemes to launder the billions of dollars of drug proceeds, including bulk cash smuggling from the US to Mexico and infiltrating US-based insurance companies, reloadable debit cards, and numerous shell corporations, including a juice company and a fish flour business.

The organisation relied on a vast network of corrupt government officials and employees to protect and further the interests of the Sinaloa Cartel.

They included local law enforcement officers, prison guards, high-ranking members of the armed forces and elected office holders.

In exchange, the Cartel paid these individuals millions of dollars in bribes.

El Chapo exerted strict control of his drug empire by recruiting an army of barbaric bodyguards and creating a sophisticated communications network while continuing to expand into the European drug market.

In 2015, Europol, the EU's law enforcement agency, said Mexican mobs had gradually begun increasing their influence over the Colombian-dominated market. In recent years, they have developed their smuggling methods, sending bulk shipments by private planes.

According to court documents, his wife Emma Coronel Aispuro is an alleged "narco princess" and she is now facing charges of participating in a conspiracy to distribute cocaine, methamphetamine, heroin, and marijuana for importation into the US

What is El Chapo's net worth?

The narcotics kingpin created an enviable empire that even saw him make it onto Forbes' list of billionaires four years in a row.

Prosecutors say he made US$12.67 billion via the drug syndicate and as of February 2012, his net worth is estimated to be over $16 billion.

US District Judge Brian Cogan ordered Guzman to forfeit $12.6 billion after his conviction.

He also said Guzman deserved the harshest sentence possible because any potentially redeeming qualities were overshadowed by "overwhelming evil."

US officials said that Guzman's personal arsenal "included a gold-plated AK-47 and three diamond-encrusted .38 caliber handguns, one emblazoned with his initials, 'JGL'."

The tenth richest Mexican is also said to own a private zoo, private planes, and luxury coastal properties.

Guzman's Sinaloa Cartel – an international drug trafficking, money laundering and organised crime syndicate established in the mid 1980s – was also involved in the production, smuggling and distribution of Mexican methamphetamine, marijuana, ecstasy and heroin across the US and Europe. El Chapo's sons, 'los Chapitos' or 'the little Chapos', are currently in command of the cartel after it was revealed previous leader Ismael Zambaba was "sick with diabetes".

Where is El Chapo now?

Guzman is currently serving his sentence at the United States Penitentiary Maximum Facility, ADX Florence.

Earning the nickname "the Alcatraz of the Rockies", El Chapo was sent to the high-security slammer to paralyse any of his escape ambitions, after he pulled off two daring breakouts in 2001 and 2014 in Mexico. No inmate has ever escaped ADX Florence, USA Today reports.

The remote prison is surrounded by razor-wire fences, gun towers, heavily-armed patrols and attack dogs, with snipers on guard in gun towers.

He arrived at the facility on June 19, two days after he was awarded a life sentence, joining infamous organised crime figures such as Kaboni Savage and Luis Felipe.

El Chapo resides in a 7-by-12-foot concrete cell with double doors for 23 hours a day in isolation and is granted an hour outdoors to get some fresh air.

His lawyer, Mariel Colon claimed the harsh conditions at the supermax prison have been detrimental to his physical health, though "he still has mental clarity".

"He looks much skinnier, a little more stifled. He is not doing well there. It is the saddest I have ever seen him," she told Univision.

"He spends all his time in isolation, nobody speaks Spanish, the guards don't speak Spanish, so many things are difficult for him. All he does is look at the wall, the ceiling, try to watch television a little, but he can not do it well because of the problem in his eyes."

In 2011, 11 inmates filed a federal class-action suit against ADX Florence after enduring 23 hours a day of confinement, alleging chronic abuse and a failure to diagnose mental health conditions.

An Amnesty International report found prisoners spend years in solitary confinement and often go days "with only a few words spoken to them”.

Human interaction is virtually non-existent – meals are eaten in the solitude of their own cells, within feet of their toilets.

Guzman's legal team are fighting to have him returned to Mexico to serve the remainder of his sentence and his U.S lawyers continue to appeal the judge's decision.

Due to the coronavirus pandemic, only his two 9-year-old twin daughters with Emma Coronel Aispuro, and his attorneys can visit him.

"He's even more alone now after Covid-19," Colon explained.

"They completely canceled all visits, legal and social. He was allowed three hours a week of outdoor exercise but that has also been suspended in order to limit his contact with the guards, so of course, this has been hard, or harder on him and it has affected Mr. Guzman emotionally and psychologically in my opinion."

How did he escape prison?

El Chapo's first bold breakout came in 2001, when he managed to escape Puente Grande, a maximum-security Mexican prison in the sate of Jalisco, by hiding in a laundry cart and bribing guards.

He was facing a 20-year-stretch after he was imprisoned for murder and drug trafficking in 1993, and feared he would be extradited to the U.S.

On January 19, 2001, his electronically secured cell was opened and prison guards escorted Guzman in a cart of dirty laundry through unsecured hallways, before he reached the car park and jumped into the boot of a Chevrolet Monte Carlo.

After successfully evading authorities and the $7.5 million combined bounties of Mexicoand the US, El Chapo was arrested by the Mexican Navy on February 22, 2014, after he had hidden in tunnels for days on end.

After his subsequent reimprisonment, Guzman upped his antics and performed a second escape on July 11, 2015, from the Altiplano prison in Almoloya de Juarez.

He fled through a hole under the shower in his cell that continued to a mile-long ventilated and lighted tunnel that led to a construction site, equipped with a motorbike on rails to aid his speedy getaway.

The drug lord sported a GPS watch smuggled in by his contacts that allowed cartel members to track the location of El Chapo. His wife Coronel allegedly conspired the escape with other cartel members.

The intricate scheme also involved buying land near the prison, as well as preparing with a steady supply of firearms and an armoured truck.

Mexican marines and Federal Police recaptured Guzman afer a shootout on January 8, 2016.

He was later extradited to the US to face criminal charges.

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