This Cartel Boss Killed A DEA Agent. Now He Will Face Justice Thanks To $20 Million Bounty
Rafael Caro Quintero, one of the most notorious drug lords of the past half-century, is only the latest in a string of high-profile cartel leaders to face justice.
Caro Quintero, a top official in the Sinaloa cartel, is expected to be extradited to the United States after he was captured by Mexican authorities earlier this month. His arrest and extradition is a major victory for U.S. law enforcement, after placing a $20 million bounty on information pertaining to his whereabouts.
Mexican authorities arrested Caro Quintero on July 15, years after his release from a Mexican prison. The drug kingpin walked free in 2013 after a judge overruled his continued incarceration on procedural grounds when Caro Quintero was 28 years into a 40-year sentence. The U.S. condemned his release, and another warrant was put out for Caro Quintero’s arrest less than a week later. By that time, however, he had disappeared.
Caro Quintero was imprisoned for engineering the kidnapping, torture, and slaying of a Drug Enforcement Administration special agent in 1985. While the U.S. government generally works to combat Central and South America’s powerful drug cartels, the killing of a U.S. official or agent is perhaps the most prominent reason for the U.S. to target a specific criminal and take a special interest in their capture.
Caro Quintero and his associates, all highly dangerous and powerful people, have built the illegal drug trade in Mexico and the U.S. into a multi-billion-dollar annual business through the trafficking of cocaine, methamphetamine, heroine, marijuana, and other substances.
And Quintero is not the only one.
In recent decades, law enforcement have killed or captured some of the most violent criminals in the world while trying to smother the explosive drug trade. Here are just a few:
Joaquín Guzmán Loera
Joaquín Guzmán Loera, known as El Chapo, is currently being held in a “supermax” U.S. prison in Colorado after breaking out of multiple Mexican lockups. As head of the Sinaloa cartel, Guzmán Loera is one of the most powerful drug lords in modern history, dubbed in 2012 by the U.S. Treasury the “world’s most powerful drug trafficker.”
Guzmán Loera has been arrested multiple times, and made multiple escapes, before he was extradited to the U.S. in 2017. In 2019, A New York jury found him guilty on ten counts, ranging from drug trafficking to the use of firearms. Guzmán Loera’s wife was arrested last year, pleaded guilty to several crimes related to aiding her husband, and was sentenced to three years in prison.
Guzmán Loera began his drug career in the 1980s working for the precursor of the Sinaloa cartel, the Guadalajara cartel. The Guadalajara cartel broke down in the late 80s after the 1985 murder of U.S. DEA agent Enrique Camarena sparked a joint U.S.-Mexico crackdown on cartel activity. The Guadalajara cartel splintered into smaller branches, one of which was located in Guzmán Loera’s home state of Sinaloa and became known as the Sinaloa cartel with El Chapo as one of its heads.
The Sinaloa cartel rose to prominence quickly on the success of Guzmán Loera’s innovative smuggling methods, and he became a highly-sought target of law enforcement. The Sinaloa leader was first arrested in Guatemala in 1993 and extradited to Mexico. In prison, he continued to run the cartel and eventually orchestrated his first escape in 2001 with the help of corrupt prison guards.
El Chapo was again arrested in 2014, but he escaped another maximum-security Mexican prison through an underground tunnel, which ran over a mile long from a construction site to underneath Guzmán Loera’s prison shower.
El Chapo’s criminal enterprise made him one of the wealthiest men in the world, according to estimates. Forbes Magazines estimated Guzmán Loera’s net worth at $1 billion in 2009 and placed him on its billionaires list, though Forbes later “removed him from the billionaires rankings because it decided his assets were too difficult to verify.”
Héctor Luis Palma Salazar
Héctor Luis Palma Salazar, known as El Güero, was one of the founding members of the Sinaloa cartel alongside El Chapo. Also, like El Chapo, Palma Salazar has been imprisoned in both the U.S. and Mexico.
Palma Salazar is believed to have committed a string of murders, including the slaying of a deputy police commander and his escort. In addition to leading one of the largest drug cartels, Palma Salazar has also been personally involved with some of the most violent actions and reprisals amid rival gangs. His wife was decapitated, and her head was sent to him in a refrigerated box. His two kids were also thrown off of a bridge and murdered.
Palma Salazar has essentially been incarcerated since 1995. Mexican authorities took him into custody while he was recuperating from a plane crash at the home of a former top police official that
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