Mexican drug lord El Chapo Guzman 'requests US extradition'
- Published
The jailed Mexican drug lord, Joaquin Guzman, has asked to be extradited to the United States rapidly so he can receive better treatment in prison.
His lawyer said Guzman had asked him to stop fighting his extradition because guards at his prison would not let him sleep.
"El Chapo" Guzman was recaptured in January, six months after he escaped from prison.
Prison authorities say he is woken and checked every four hours.
Two US courts have requested Guzman's extradition on charges of drug trafficking in California, and murder in Texas.
But Guzman's defence teams filed an estimated nine appeals against his extradition.
Guzman's lawyer, Jose Refugio Rodriguez, said his client had told him to negotiate with the US authorities for a lighter sentence and confinement at a medium-security prison.
Speaking on a Mexican radio station, Radio Formula, he said: "He has reached his limit, it is an act of desperation."
Guzman escaped down a 1.5 km (1 mile) tunnel from the Altiplano maximum security prison outside Mexico City and was on the run for six months.
He was returned to the prison in January but to a much harsher regime.
Mr Rodriguez said his client was now kept isolated and segregated and complains his cell is small, cold and he does not see the sun.
Previously, Guzman said he had been given an hour-and-a-half every day to talk to his lawyer and an hour in the prison patio.
Every nine days, he had been allowed a four-hour conjugal visit and a four-hour family visit.
Mr Rodriguez said it would take two months to organise his extradition to the US.
- Published17 July 2019
- Published22 February 2014