
U.S. prosecutors said Tuesday they won’t seek the death penalty in their cases against Mexican cartel kingpin Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada and Rafael Caro Quintero, the drug lord charged with orchestrating the 1985 killing of a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent.
Caro Quintero, 72, and Zambada, 75, have pleaded not guilty to an array of drug trafficking charges. The prosecutions are separate, but they similarly target two of Mexico’s most notorious narcos.
Earlier this year, federal prosecutors said they were considering seeking the death penalty against Quintero, whose top count of leading a continuing criminal enterprise carries a mandatory minimum sentence of life imprisonment.
But it is unclear whether taking the death penalty off the table signals any possibility of a plea deal with either or both men. Their lawyers welcomed the decision but were circumspect about what happens next.
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Caro Quintero’s attorney, Elizabeth Macedonio, said she and her client “look forward to resolving this matter quickly to bring closure to all parties.” Zambada’s lawyer, Frank Perez, said the government’s decision “marks an important step toward achieving a fair and just resolution.”
Prosecutors said last winter that they were having plea discussions with Perez.
Prosecutors wouldn’t comment further Tuesday after telling judges in brief letters that Attorney General Pam Bondi had directed them not to pursue capital punishment for Caro Quintero, Zambada, or a third defendant, Vicente Carrillo Fuentes, known as “The Viceroy.”
Sent from Mexico to the U.S. last winter along with Caro Quintero, he also has pleaded not guilty. A message seeking comment was sent to Carrillo Fuentes’ attorney.
The cases are unfolding in the same Brooklyn federal courthouse where infamous Sinaloa cartel co-founder Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán was tried and convicted.
The Sinaloa cartel is Mexico’s oldest criminal group, with various incarnations dating to the 1970s. It is a drug trafficking power player: A former Mexican cabinet member was convicted of taking bribes to help the cartel.
Guzmán and Zambada built it from a regional group into a huge manufacturer and smuggler of cocaine, heroin and other illicit drugs to U.S., authorities say.
While Zambada was seen as the cartel’s strategist and dealmaker, prosecutors have said he also was enmeshed in its violence, at one point ordering the murder of his own nephew.
Zambada avoided capture for years, until he was arrested in Texas last year, after what he has described as a kidnapping in Mexico. One of Guzmán’s sons, Joaquin Guzmán Lopez, was arrested with Zambada. Both men were taken into custody on the tarmac. The flight and subsequent landing happened “very quickly and very quietly” with no incident once the men exited the plane, a senior law enforcement official told CBS news.
Guzmán Lopez has pleaded not guilty in a Chicago federal court. Federal prosecutors have also said they won’t seek the death penalty if he’s convicted of multiple charges. Another son of “El Chapo”, Ovidio Guzman López, is also facing narcotics trafficking charges in Chicago.
Prosecutors accuse Guzman López and his brothers of taking over Sinaloa cartel operations after their father’s arrest.
Caro Quintero headed the Guadalajara cartel, parts of which later merged into the Sinaloa organization. The White House has called him “one of the most evil cartel bosses in the world.”
Prosecutors say he is responsible for sending tons of heroin, methamphetamine, marijuana and cocaine into the U.S. and had DEA agent Enrique “Kiki” Camarena abducted, tortured and killed as revenge for a marijuana plantation raid. The killing was dramatized in the Netflix series “Narcos: Mexico.”