Wife Turns Out To Support 'El Chapo' In New York Court
El Chapo was accused of running one of the world's biggest
drug empire.
NEW YORK: Mexican drug lord Joaquin "El
Chapo" Guzman, accused of running one of the world's biggest drug empires,
glimpsed his glamorous young wife in court Friday despite being denied marital
visits behind bars.
The 59-year-old defendant, one of the world's most notorious criminals who
escaped twice from prison in Mexico, has been held in solitary confinement in
New York since being extradited to the United States on January 19. Emma
Coronel, a 27-year-old former beauty queen and mother of Guzman's twins,
attended his second court hearing in Brooklyn on Friday, dressed in a black
coat with a yellow scarf knotted around her neck.
Her husband, dressed in navy short-sleeved prison scrubs, sat calmly and
expressionless throughout the 40-minute hearing, following along with the help
of a Spanish language interpreter sitting next to him.
His physical presence was a victory for the defense after prosecutors wanted
him to appear by video link to keep down costs and minimize the disruption of
transporting him on the two-mile (three-kilometer) trip from his cell.
Guzman's lawyer used the hearing to complain about the draconian security
conditions of his detention, request easier access to her client and to ask
Judge Brian Cogan to grant Guzman visits from his wife.
"We sought permission for Mrs Guzman to visit him or make him a telephone
call. She's present in court today. She's not permitted to visit," public
defender Michelle Gelernt told the hearing.
"We are not permitted to give Mr Guzman a glass of water," she said.
But the federal judge declined to intervene on the matter of wifely visits,
saying it was up to the jail. The Metropolitan Correctional Center in downtown
Manhattan has already denied permission.
"I am going to defer to prison authorities who should be in or not,"
he said. "It's an unusual case," Cogan noted. "Obviously they
are taking extra security measures. We know the reasons for that." Guzman escaped from prisons in Mexico, once
by fleeing in a laundry cart in 2001 and secondly by tunneling his way to
freedom under his shower in 2015.
'Horrid' Security'
After he was recaptured, Mexico lost patience and agreed to his extradition. On
January 20 he pleaded not guilty to a raft of firearms, drug trafficking and
conspiracy charges at an initial hearing in New York.
Although a handful of inmates have in the past escaped from the MCC, American
authorities are adamant that Guzman will have no chance of freedom.
His lawyers say he is locked in a cell 23 hours a day with only one hour of
solitary exercise.
Friday's hearing was conducted under stringent security measures, with armed
guards dressed in bullet-proof vests at the court door and attendees required
to pass through two security checkpoints before entering the room.
Cogan allowed defense lawyers to access Guzman's public extradition documents
in Mexico without their client having to sign for them after Gelernt complained
that the Mexican government had otherwise denied access.
Speaking to reporters after the hearing, Gelernt questioned the legality of his
extradition to the United States, which one of his Mexican lawyers also branded
illegal at the time, saying that another petition had been pending. "He's very concerned as are we about the
legality of his extradition to the US, to the eastern district of New York,"
the American public defender said.
Gelernt again complained about the "horrid," and
"excessive" security precautions in which he is being held, saying
that only four to five members of his legal team were admitted to the jail. Coronel appeared alongside her husband's
lawyer but did not speak.
The judge set the next hearing in May.
If he stands trial and is convicted, Guzman is likely to spend the rest of his
life in a maximum security US prison. Prosecutors are also seeking to obtain a
$14 billion criminal forfeiture order against him.
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