News (Media Awareness Project) - Mexico: Drug Lord's Escape Told Like A Thriller |
Title: | Mexico: Drug Lord's Escape Told Like A Thriller |
Published On: | 2001-02-21 |
Source: | Register-Guard, The (OR) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-26 23:24:25 |
DRUG LORD'S ESCAPE TOLD LIKE A THRILLER
MEXICO CITY- The tale of how one of Mexico's top suspected drug bosses
slipped out of a maximum-security prison has yet to be told in its
entirety, but already it has all the makings of a Hollywood blockbuster.
Officials, describing the intricate plot for the first time late Monday
night, said Joaquin Guzman spent months corrupting prison guards, then
persuaded them to help him sneak out a stash of gold - only to smuggle
himself out instead.
So far, authorities have implicated 78 people in the Jan. 19 escape, with
at least 59 of them in custody, including the director of the Puente Grande
prison in western Jalisco state. Prosecutors said others could still be
implicated. Guzman remains at large.
Investigators have been able to reconstruct the 43-year-old Guzman's escape
route, attorney general inspector Carlos Javier Vega said Monday evening.
He illustrated it with computer-animated videos that looked like a new
level of the game "Doom."
"Everything points toward the escape being the product of a perfectly
planned operation," Vega said.
Such planning allegedly is nothing new for Guzman: He is wanted in the
United States on charges that he supervised the building of a tunnel 1,416
feet long and 65 feet deep beneath the border to smuggle drugs into the
United States.
At Puente Grande, Guzman was serving more than 20 years for criminal
association and bribery, and was linked to a 1993 shootout in which a Roman
Catholic cardinal was killed in the crossfire.
Guzman, along with two other alleged drug lords, "practically became the
owners" of the prison, Vega said. He said the men put guards on their
payroll, smuggling in alcohol, drugs, prostitutes - "and even Viagra."
The only thing Guzman couldn't buy, Vega said, was his freedom.
And so he began to plot. Investigators say he enlisted the help of a
maintenance worker, Francisco Javier Camberos, 35, who had complete access
to the entire prison. Guzman buttered up the guards by circulating rumors
that he was about to be freed and offering them high-paid jobs in a
security firm he said he would form.
On Jan. 13, Vega said, Guzman set his plot in motion. He summoned two
high-level guards and asked for help in smuggling out a couple pounds of
gold he said had been collected in the prison. Camberos, he said, would
carry out the gold, and they would get a cut.
Three days later, Guzman discussed with prison supervisors who would be on
duty Jan. 19, and made staffing changes he said were necessary to get the
gold out without being detected, Vega said.
But the plot was nearly foiled the afternoon of Jan. 19, Vega said. After
an inspection, federal officials ordered additional security measures. The
prison director ignored their orders, Vega said.
That night, Guzman slipped under a sheet into a cushioned laundry cart, and
Camberos wheeled it down the prison corridors.
When they reached the parking lot, Vega said, Camberos told the guard:
"It's the master's gold," and slipped Guzman into his car. The guards let
Camberos drive out without checking his vehicle, Vega said, under orders
from the area commanders. The computer disk keeping record of vehicles
coming in and out was later found to have been erased.
A month later, Guzman remains missing.
MEXICO CITY- The tale of how one of Mexico's top suspected drug bosses
slipped out of a maximum-security prison has yet to be told in its
entirety, but already it has all the makings of a Hollywood blockbuster.
Officials, describing the intricate plot for the first time late Monday
night, said Joaquin Guzman spent months corrupting prison guards, then
persuaded them to help him sneak out a stash of gold - only to smuggle
himself out instead.
So far, authorities have implicated 78 people in the Jan. 19 escape, with
at least 59 of them in custody, including the director of the Puente Grande
prison in western Jalisco state. Prosecutors said others could still be
implicated. Guzman remains at large.
Investigators have been able to reconstruct the 43-year-old Guzman's escape
route, attorney general inspector Carlos Javier Vega said Monday evening.
He illustrated it with computer-animated videos that looked like a new
level of the game "Doom."
"Everything points toward the escape being the product of a perfectly
planned operation," Vega said.
Such planning allegedly is nothing new for Guzman: He is wanted in the
United States on charges that he supervised the building of a tunnel 1,416
feet long and 65 feet deep beneath the border to smuggle drugs into the
United States.
At Puente Grande, Guzman was serving more than 20 years for criminal
association and bribery, and was linked to a 1993 shootout in which a Roman
Catholic cardinal was killed in the crossfire.
Guzman, along with two other alleged drug lords, "practically became the
owners" of the prison, Vega said. He said the men put guards on their
payroll, smuggling in alcohol, drugs, prostitutes - "and even Viagra."
The only thing Guzman couldn't buy, Vega said, was his freedom.
And so he began to plot. Investigators say he enlisted the help of a
maintenance worker, Francisco Javier Camberos, 35, who had complete access
to the entire prison. Guzman buttered up the guards by circulating rumors
that he was about to be freed and offering them high-paid jobs in a
security firm he said he would form.
On Jan. 13, Vega said, Guzman set his plot in motion. He summoned two
high-level guards and asked for help in smuggling out a couple pounds of
gold he said had been collected in the prison. Camberos, he said, would
carry out the gold, and they would get a cut.
Three days later, Guzman discussed with prison supervisors who would be on
duty Jan. 19, and made staffing changes he said were necessary to get the
gold out without being detected, Vega said.
But the plot was nearly foiled the afternoon of Jan. 19, Vega said. After
an inspection, federal officials ordered additional security measures. The
prison director ignored their orders, Vega said.
That night, Guzman slipped under a sheet into a cushioned laundry cart, and
Camberos wheeled it down the prison corridors.
When they reached the parking lot, Vega said, Camberos told the guard:
"It's the master's gold," and slipped Guzman into his car. The guards let
Camberos drive out without checking his vehicle, Vega said, under orders
from the area commanders. The computer disk keeping record of vehicles
coming in and out was later found to have been erased.
A month later, Guzman remains missing.
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