‘El Chapo’ consort opens up about cartels’ ruthlessness

A key government witness at the U.S. trial of notorious Mexican drug lord Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman spelled out the bloodshed and other cold realities of international drug-trafficking Tuesday without expressing regret or making excuses.

Former Colombian kingpin Juan Carlos Ramirez Abadia was asked on cross-examination by a lawyer for Guzman whether he ordered scores of murders, whether he kept a ledger that showed how much hit men were paid, and whether he repeatedly lied to and bribed Colombian authorities with tens of millions of dollars to stay in business.

Ramirez Abadia also testified that he managed to evade arrest by supplying ‘corrupt DEA agents’ with ‘prostitutes, gifts, [and] apartments.’ 

Juan Carlos Ramirez Abadia (second left) testifies against accused Mexican drug lord Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman (bottom right) in this courtroom sketch as he appears in Brooklyn federal court in New York. The sketch is from Monday’s proceedings

Among the matter-of-fact answers he gave through a Spanish interpreter: ‘Totally correct.’ 

”Obviously.’ 

‘At the time, of course I lied.’ 

‘That’s how it was, sir.’

Ramirez Abadia testified that he ordered at least 150 killings before he was arrested by federal authorities in 2007, the New York Post reported. 

His victims included low-level cartel members in the New York metropolitan area.

Ramirez Abadia admitted on the witness stand that he ordered the death of a woman who ran one of his local stash houses. She was found with four bullet wounds to the head. 

The testimony by Ramirez Abadia, known for radically altering his face through plastic surgery, came during the third week of the trial in federal court in Brooklyn.

Guzman’s lawyers say the witness is part of a crew of low-life cooperators who are framing their client to get breaks in their own drug-trafficking cases.

Ramirez Abadia testified how his Norte del Valle cartel used a fleet of planes and boats to ship tons of cocaine to Mexico, where the Sinaloa cartel was tasked with smuggling it into the United States under the direction of Guzman and others.

Colombia's Juan Carlos Ramirez Abadia arrives to a federal police station after being arrested in Sao Paulo in 2007

Colombia’s Juan Carlos Ramirez Abadia arrives to a federal police station after being arrested in Sao Paulo in 2007

The testimony by Ramirez Abadia, known for radically altering his face through plastic surgery, came during the third week of the trial in federal court in Brooklyn. He is seen left before plastic surgery. The photo on the right shows him after his plastic surgery

The testimony by Ramirez Abadia, known for radically altering his face through plastic surgery, came during the third week of the trial in federal court in Brooklyn. He is seen left before plastic surgery. The photo on the right shows him after his plastic surgery

Prosecutors say the massive amounts of drugs and cash flowing back and forth across the U.S. border in the 1990s and early 2000s were documented in ledgers that looked like mundane business records.

Seeking to drive home the human toll of the violent drug trade, defense attorney William Purpura got Ramirez Adadia to confirm the ledgers also showed the expenses for murders for hire – $45,000 to have three people killed and $338,776 in another instance because, he said, so many hit men were involved.

The dead included a top lieutenant rubbed out in prison after his arrest merely because, Ramirez Adadia suggested, ‘he knew a lot about my organization.’ 

Another time, the witness said he lured a mutinous cartel member to a meeting where the victim and his entourage were slaughtered in a gangland-style ambush, their bodies then loaded in pickup trucks for disposal.

He also acknowledged lower-level operatives in the New York City area were knocked off under suspicion of stealing or snitching, including a woman in Fort Lee, New Jersey. 

Her husband and son also perished in the process, according to the defense.

Once he learned he had been indicted in the U.S., Ramirez Adadia fled to Brazil, where he made his face look like a theatrical mask with implants and injections. 

He also used disguises for photos on fake identification cards with various aliases in a bid to hide his identity, which ultimately failed.

Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman (seen here being arrested by U.S. agents at Long Island MacArthur Airport on January 19, 2017) faces up to 17 charges laid out in six separate indictments filed by authorities in California, Texas, Illinois, Florida and New Hampshire

Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman (seen here being arrested by U.S. agents at Long Island MacArthur Airport on January 19, 2017) faces up to 17 charges laid out in six separate indictments filed by authorities in California, Texas, Illinois, Florida and New Hampshire

On Tuesday, he was asked about the meaning of ‘Chupeta,’ the nickname cited in the U.S. indictment filed against him.

‘Un dulce,’ he said. 

‘Candy.’

El Chapo faces up to 17 charges laid out in six separate indictments filed by authorities in California, Texas, Illinois, Florida and New Hampshire. 

He stands accused of conspiring to import more than 264,000 pounds of cocaine into the United States between 1990 and 2005.

The Sinoloa cartel is also alleged to engage in murder, extortion, money laundering, drug trafficking, and other crimes. 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk