BFF-28 El Chapo’s US drug trial set for opening statements

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BFF-28

US-MEXICO-CRIME-DRUGS-TRIAL

El Chapo’s US drug trial set for opening statements

NEW YORK, Nov 13, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Prosecutors and defense lawyers are set
to deliver opening statements Tuesday in the New York trial of Joaquin “El
Chapo” Guzman, one of the world’s most notorious criminals accused of
spending a quarter of a century smuggling cocaine into the United States.

Twelve jurors and six alternates were selected last week from a pool of
dozens that saw several dismissed because they feared for their lives if they
were impaneled and another who suffered a panic attack.

The seven women and five men will determine whether Guzman is guilty on 11
trafficking, firearms and money laundering charges during what is expected to
be a more than four-month trial.

Their names will be kept anonymous under razor-tight security protocols.
They will be partially sequestered, escorted to and from court every day by
armed US Marshals.

Guzman is accused of leading the Sinaloa cartel and turning it into the
largest criminal organization on the planet. He was extradited to the United
States in 2017 after twice escaping from prison in Mexico.

The 61-year-old is considered the world’s largest drug trafficker since the
death of Colombia’s Pablo Escobar.

Prosecutors say that from 1989 to 2014, the cartel smuggled 340,892 pounds
(154,626 kilograms) of cocaine into the United States, as well as heroin,
methamphetamine and marijuana, raking in $14 billion.

Last week, Judge Brian Cogan rejected a request from Guzman to greet and
embrace his beauty queen wife Emma Coronel on Tuesday, shortly before opening
statements, ruling that it was too risky.

– Masses of evidence –

The defendant is banned from communicating with or having any physical
contact with the 29-year-old mother of his seven-year-old twin girls.

Cogan said the requested hug violated security procedures designed to
prevent Guzman from “coordinating any escape from prison or directing any
attack” on cooperating witnesses.

Guzman twice escaped from prison in Mexico, once hidden in a laundry cart
and the second time slipping down a tunnel that reached his prison shower.

US prosecutors have spent years piecing together a case that they hope will
end with Guzman spending the rest of his life behind bars in a maximum-
security US prison.

He has pleaded not guilty, but the government has presented so much
evidence — more than 300,000 pages and at least 117,000 recordings — that
the defense complains they haven’t had time to review it all.

More than a dozen of the several hundred witnesses expected to testify are
in witness protection programs or are already in jail, housed in special
wings to protect them from reprisals.

Guzman has been held in solitary confinement since Mexico extradited him in
January 2017, one day before Donald Trump took office. He spends 23 hours a
day in his cell.

The only visitors he is allowed are his lawyers and daughters, from whom he
is separated by thick glass.

BSS/AFP/MR/ 1220 hrs