The Mexican government has approved the extradition of drug lord Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán to the United States, a decision aimed at delivering one of the world's most notorious criminals to the U.S. justice system to face a vast array of drug trafficking and organized crime charges.
Mexico's Foreign Relations Department announced the move in a statement Friday afternoon, saying that the government has agreed to send Guzmán to the United States to face charges in Texas and California for murder, money laundering, weapons possession, distribution of cocaine and other crimes. It said Mexico had received guarantees that the death penalty, which is prohibited in Mexico, would not be sought against Guzmán.
Guzman's lawyers are almost certain to appeal the decision. Mexican officials expect it could take months before any extradition actually occurs.
Guzmán, the leader of the Sinaloa drug cartel, has broken out of two federal prisons during his drug-running career, but he was recaptured last year in a Pacific coastal town. Earlier this month, Guzmán was transferred from the Altiplano maximum-security federal prison, from which he escaped last year, to a new prison in Ciudad Juarez along the border with Texas.
The move marks a major development for the Mexican government and its most important prisoner.