US Sanctions Nine Tied To Mexico’s Sinaloa Cartel
The US Treasury has announced sanctions against nine affiliates of Mexico’s Sinaloa drug trafficking cartel, as well as the current leader of Colombia’s powerful Clan del Golfo criminal enterprise.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control designated all 10 for their roles in drug trafficking, meaning any of their assets in the United States will be blocked and US citizens are generally prohibited from dealing with any of their assets.
The nine affiliates of the Sinaloa cartel follow a US indictment unsealed in April that targeted a branch of the Sinaloa cartel run by the sons of former leader Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán.
Report says Mexico extradited one of those sons Ovidio Guzman Lopez, earlier this month to the United States. The sons were identified as leading producers and traffickers of the deadly synthetic opioid fentanyl.
“Today’s actions reinforce the United States’ whole of government approach to saving lives by disrupting illicit drug supply chains,” US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken said in a statement.
Indictment
Monday’s sanctions include several other people named in that indictment including people who assisted with security, the actual movement of fentanyl to the US, and the laundering of drug profits back to the cartel in Mexico.
The sanctions against Colombian Jobanis Villadiego coincide with the meeting of the United States-Colombia Counternarcotics Working Group in Bogota.
Villadiego, better known as “Chiquito Malo,” took over the Clan del Golfo in 2022 after it was announced the group’s previous leader would be extradited to the US Villadiego launched an offensive targeting Colombian security forces in retaliation.
Villadiego is under indictment in the Southern District of Florida for cocaine trafficking and in the Eastern District of New York for being engaged in a continuing criminal enterprise.
AP/Christopher Ojilere