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The first shipment of cocaine to Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán was enough for Colombian Juan Carlos Ramirez Abadía, also known as "Pacifier", to learn about the Mexican's capacity as a drug trafficker.
Abadía stated that the drug he had delivered to Mexico had reached its final destination in Los Angeles (United States). "It was super fast."
On Thursday, the abbot testified as a prosecution witness at the Guzman trial in New York.
In other circumstances, his speech could make a drug dealer proud. But before a jury, praise seems to put Guzman at greater risk, who risks being sentenced to life imprisonment, accused of having sent more than 150 tons of cocaine to the United States.
Abadia's testimony was cold and different from anything heard in court since the start of the trial on November 12.
In the Brooklyn District Courts, they pbaded from former members of El Chapo to US agents, as well as specialists in money laundering and trafficking in drug.
But Abadía, 55, his face disfigured by plastic surgery, does not appear less than someone who supplies drugs to Guzmán: the trafficker of one of the most famous traffickers in the world .
& # 39; Head and Face Shots & # 39;
Ramírez Abadía was the leader of the Colombian Norte Valley cartel until his arrest in São Paulo in August 2007, before being extradited to the United States.
Between 1989 and his arrest, the criminal organization exported about 400 tons of cocaine to the United States, most through the Sinaloa cartel of Chapo, Abadía announced Thursday.
He also admitted that during this period, "about 150 people" died alone, including a person whom he himself killed in 2004, wounded "at the head and at the face".
He did not disclose the identity of the victim and the prosecutor who interrogated him avoided asking for details about the murder, although the case might eventually surface again when Abadia returns to testify next week.
To avoid arrest, the drug trafficker testified that he bribed the Mexican authorities, tried to erase his criminal record and underwent several cosmetic surgeries.
"I changed my face," he explained. "I changed my chin, cheekbones, eyes, ears and nose." But none of that was enough: his arrest in Brazil had been ordered on the basis of a speech recognition technology.
He is about to be sentenced to 25 years in prison in the United States after pleading guilty to running a cocaine trafficking organization and confiscating more than $ 1 billion worth of cocaine. 'badets.
He has entered into a collaboration agreement with the prosecution in the hope of reducing his sentence.
In court, the Colombian drew attention to his prominent cheekbones and square chin. He witnessed wearing gloves and a jacket sitting a few meters from Chapo, who was staring at him.
El Chapo's defense, in turn, questions the credibility of cooperating witnesses, such as "Abadia, as" former offenders who accuse others of seeking their own advantage ".
Abadía, described by former witnesses as one of the main suppliers of the Sinaloa cartel, said he met Guzmán a dozen times between the early 1990s and 2007 in order to carry out illicit activities.
The first meeting was held at a hotel in Mexico City. El Chapo responds to 11 charges that could sentence him to life imprisonment – Photo: Reuters "El Chapo responds to 11 charges that could sentence him to life imprisonment" src = "data: image / jpeg; base64, / 9j / 4AAQSkZJRgABAQAAAQABAAD / 2wBDAAMCAgMCAgMDAwMEAwMEBQgFBQQEBQoHBwYIDAoMDAsKCwsNDhIQDQ4RDgsLEBYQERMUFRUVDA8XGBYUGBIUFRT / 2wBDAQMEBAUEBQkFBQkUDQsNFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBQUFBT / wgARCAARABkDASIAAhEBAxEB / 8QAGgAAAgIDAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAUGBwEECP / EABcBAAMBAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAECAwD / 2gAMAwEAAhADEAAAAaazpXlKnPqByrok9nwYVKjBh // EAB8QAAEEAgIDAAAAAAAAAAAAAAQAAgMFARMSIjI0Nf / aAAgBAQABBQLWBI0imFwOQ2CFccrUQ5HPZJUGRSwP7Kv8BfgWvtL / xAAbEQACAgMBAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAQIRITFSYf / aAAgBAwEBPwGNNPwu8nRHSP / EABoRAAMBAAMAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAABAhExMkH / 2gAIAQIBAT8BvZaz0zB8yV2Z / 8QAKhAAAgECAgcJAAAAAAAAAAAAAQIAAxESIQQQIjEyYYITQVFzkbGywdH / 2gAIAQEABj8CQ1BhIXaAXNj9QVl7UITZeccUAeRffacJhGFz323Xy / IwWjjVqOyMrZjITC7WfwBnEfWaP1 / GUPKpzoX21f / EAEC QAAEDAwQDAAAAAAAAAAAAAAEAESExQWEQcZHwUaHx / 9oACAEBAAE / IYUefiSbGjBuqGIwP5xhroAZu4BlYeGXzVQblyDKuqIc6rGUMRwt4EZhguwl7mlbv46f / 9oADAMBAAIAAwAAABBQSD7 / xAAcEQACAQUBAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAATFBYXGhsfD / 2gAIAQMBAT8Qdg / LigVFGL4aR EABkRAAIDAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAABESGhsf // / // aAAgBAgEBPxCA2FkM1rqNh EAB8QAQEAAgICAwEAAAAAAAAAAAERACExQVHwEHGx8f / aAAgBAQABPxDeijeCJgDV7SkumVBsDcp6c0XdxssnjaUgOVdAec / vMbthEUg8NSyfYMHh0UCAFRBKGWDVyJgRWA2FTU15y + k / c9b456zxnB8Z / 9k = "/>
El Chapo responds to 11 charges in total could sentence him to life imprisonment – Photo: Reuters