Current:Home > NewsMexico’s former public security chief set to be sentenced in US drug case -Edge Finance Strategies
Mexico’s former public security chief set to be sentenced in US drug case
View
Date:2025-04-18 14:34:54
NEW YORK (AP) — Mexico’s former public security chief is set to be sentenced in a U.S. court on Wednesday after being convicted of taking bribes to aid drug traffickers.
Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn are asking a judge to order that Genaro García Luna be incarcerated for life, while his lawyers say he should spend no more than 20 years behind bars.
García Luna, 56, was convicted early last year of taking millions of dollars in bribes to protect the violent Sinaloa cartel that he was supposedly combating. He denied the allegations.
Prosecutors wrote that García Luna’s actions advanced a drug trafficking conspiracy that resulted in the deaths of thousands of American and Mexican citizens.
“It is difficult to overstate the magnitude of the defendant’s crimes, the deaths and addiction he facilitated and his betrayal of the people of Mexico and the United States,” prosecutors wrote. “His crimes demand justice.”
García Luna headed Mexico’s federal police before he served in a cabinet-level position as the country’s top security official from 2006 to 2012 during the administration of former Mexican President Felipe Calderón.
García Luna was not only considered the architect of Calderón’s bloody war on cartels, but was also hailed as an ally by the U.S. in its fight on drug trafficking. During the trial, photos were shown of García Luna shaking hands with former President Barack Obama and speaking with former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former Sen. John McCain.
But prosecutors say that in return for millions of dollars, García Luna provided intelligence about investigations against the cartel, information about rival cartels and the safe passage of massive quantities of drugs.
Prosecutors said he ensured drug traffickers were notified in advance of raids and sabotaged legitimate police operations aimed at apprehending cartel leaders.
Drug traffickers were able to ship over 1 million kilograms of cocaine through Mexico and into the United States using planes, trains, trucks and submarines while García Luna held his posts, prosecutors said.
During former Sinaloa kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman’s trial in the same court in 2018, a former cartel member testified that he personally delivered at least $6 million in payoffs to García Luna, and that cartel members agreed to pool up to $50 million to pay for his protection.
Prosecutors also claim that García Luna plotted to undo last year’s trial verdict by seeking to bribe or corruptly convince multiple inmates at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn to support false allegations that two government witnesses communicated via contraband cellular phones in advance of the trial.
In their appeal for leniency, García Luna’s lawyers wrote to a judge that García Luna and his family have suffered public attacks throughout the nearly five years he has been imprisoned.
“He has lost everything he worked for — his reputation, all of his assets, the institutions that he championed, even the independence of the Mexican judiciary — and he has been powerless to control any of it,” they wrote.
“Just in the past five years he has lost two siblings, learned of the disability of another due to COVID-19 complications and the imposition of an arrest warrant against her, and learned that his youngest sister was jailed because of her relationship to him,” they added.
In Mexico, President Claudia Sheinbaum briefly commented on the case on Tuesday, saying: “The big issue here is how someone who was awarded by United States agencies, who ex-President Calderón said wonderful things about his security secretary, today is prisoner in the United States because it’s shown that he was tied to drug trafficking.”
___
Associated Press writer Fabiola Sánchez in Mexico City contributed to this report
veryGood! (25993)
Related
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Truck driver faces manslaughter charges after 5 killed in I-95 crash, North Carolina officials say
- Commission chair says there’s no ‘single silver bullet’ to improving Georgia’s Medicaid program
- F1 driver Esteban Ocon to join American Haas team from next season
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- She's a basketball star. She wears a hijab. So she's barred from France's Olympics team
- Watch Simone Biles nail a Yurchenko double pike vault at Olympics podium training
- S&P and Nasdaq close at multiweek lows as Tesla, Alphabet weigh heavily
- Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
- Michigan coach Sherrone Moore in no rush to name starting quarterback
Ranking
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- Brittany Aldean opens up about Maren Morris feud following transgender youth comments
- Man charged with murder in fatal shooting of Detroit-area police officer, prosecutor says
- Bill Belichick's absence from NFL coaching sidelines looms large – but maybe not for long
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Cindy Crawford Weighs in on Austin Butler’s Elvis Accent
- Watch: Trail cam captures bear cubs wrestling, playing in California pond
- Daughter of late Supreme Court Justice Scalia appointed to Virginia Board of Education
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Workers link US, Canadian sides of new Gordie Howe International Bridge over Detroit River
Zendaya's Wet Look at 2024 Paris Olympics Pre-Party Takes Home the Gold
Truck driver faces manslaughter charges after 5 killed in I-95 crash, North Carolina officials say
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
'America’s Grandmother' turns 115: Meet the oldest living person in the US, Elizabeth Francis
Squatter gets 40 years for illegally taking over Panama City Beach condo in Florida
Woman pronounced dead, man airlifted after house explodes in upstate New York