51²è¹Ý

Mexican drug lord Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera – aka “El Chapo”
Kingpin no longer. AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo
Mexican drug lord Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera – aka “El Chapo”
Kingpin no longer. AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo

Cartel kingpin El Chapo is jailed for life, but the US-Mexico drug trade is booming

Cartel kingpin El Chapo is jailed for life, but the US-Mexico drug trade is booming

The United States may have locked up Mexico’s worst “bad hombre,” but the business he ran is far too big to fail.

The infamous Mexican drug lord Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera – aka “El Chapo” – has been  plus an additional 30 years for , among other crimes committed over the past quarter-century as head of Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, the .

Judge Brian Cogan also  Guzmán – who was convicted in U.S. federal court in February after a  – to forfeit US$12.6 billion in illicit narcotics proceeds.

U.S. officials celebrated El Chapo’s demise as a triumph in the . President Donald Trump has taken an aggressive , vowing at his January 2017 inauguration to stop “the crime and gangs and drugs that have stolen too many lives.”

“This sentencing shows the world that no matter how protected or powerful you are, DEA will ensure that you face justice,”  the acting administrator of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, Uttam Dhillon, at Guzmán’s sentencing.

Having studied the  and economics of the , I see a different lesson in Guzmán’s life story. The U.S. may have  Mexico’s worst “bad hombre,” but the business he ran is far too big to fail.

‘Insatiable demand’

Mexicans have greeted Guzmán’s demise with more skepticism.

The Mexican newspaper La Jornada noted that the flow of illicit drugs into the United States has not diminished since El Chapo’s arrest.

Mexican estimates suggest that each month the Sinaloa cartel  two tons of cocaine and 10,000 tons of marijuana plus heroine, methamphetamine and other drugs. Founded in Sinaloa state in the late 1980s, the cartel now  in 50 countries, including Argentina, the Philippines and Russia.

But Mexican cartels were born to serve consumers in the United States, the world’s  of illicit drugs.

It’s Americans’ “insatiable demand for illegal drugs,” as then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton , that allowed Guzmán’s Sinaloa cartel to become the world’s biggest supplier of illicit drugs.

Drug trafficking has a highly lucrative business model. According to data from 2016, the  for a gram of cocaine is approximately US$2.30 in Colombia and $12.50 in Mexico. The same gram will cost $28 in the U.S. By the time it gets to Australia, it could fetch as much as $176.50.

 per gram are even higher: $82 in the U.S. and $400 in Australia.

Drug prices rise significantly during transit as intermediaries demand compensation for the risk they assume in getting the product to consumers. This liability markup is one reason that keeping drugs illegal has made them so expensive on the streets and so profitable for the people who trade in them.

Killing, threats and bribes

Illegality is also the reason that the drug trade is so violent.

Running an , kingpins like Guzmán must enforce their own agreements and protect themselves from authorities and competitors. They do so using a combination of killing, threats and bribes.

At least eight  once worked under Guzman’s command in Mexico,  competing cartels and members deemed traitors.

Guzmán also  as many officers as necessary to succeed in his business.

Alex Cifuentes, a close associate of Guzmán,  in the trial that the cartel chief once paid a $100 million bribe to then-Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto – an accusation Peña Nieto’s administration  as “false, defamatory and absurd.”

Guzmán certainly . In 2015, he  by riding a motorcycle through a lit, ventilated mile-long tunnel constructed directly underneath his cell.

Walls versus profit

For five decades since President Richard Nixon , the United States has chose not to focus on the economic forces driving this clandestine industry in favor of punishment, sending  of drug traffickers, corner dealers and drug users to jail.

Even as states try to ease mass incarceration by  and decriminalizing minor drug offenses like possession, President Trump has called for escalating the federal government’s drug war.

In 2018, Trump delivered an incendiary speech at the United Nations decrying the “scourge” of drugs, followed with a  signed by 129 nations to “cut off the supply of illicit drugs by stopping their production…and flow across borders.”

Trump’s main proposals for ending the U.S.-Mexico drug trade are to more  and to build a border wall, which will be monitored by 10,000 additional immigration officers.

A  is unlikely to thwart drug smugglers, particularly the wily Sinaloa cartel, history shows.

When confronted with a high-tech border fence in Arizona, constructed long before Trump’s administration, Mexican smugglers use a  to fling  over to the American side.

“We’ve got the best fence money can buy,” former DEA chief Michael Brown  New York Times journalist Patrick Radden Keefe in 2017, “and they counter us with a 2,500-year-old technology.”

Then there’s the other ancient technology perfected by Guzmán: . In the past quarter-century,  cleverly disguised illicit passages under the U.S.-Mexico border. Many, like the one Guzmán used to escape prison, are equipped with electricity, ventilation and elevators.

Corruption undermines the law outside Mexico, too. Between 2006 and 2016 some 200 employees and contractors of the Department of Homeland Security – the agency charged with defending the U.S. border – have accepted nearly $15 million in bribes, .

“Almost no evidence about corrupt American officials” was allowed at El Chapo’s trial, the Times .

After El Chapo

El Chapo’s downfall hasn’t reduced the availability, price, use or lethality of currently illegal drugs.

In 2017, the year of Guzmán’s  to the U.S., 70,237 people  in the United States.

Another  in Mexico, where the  has caused violence to escalate nationwide.

Guzmán’s capture hasn’t even hurt the Sinaloa cartel, which has a  who promotes a  and is expanding its operations into other criminal activities like illegal mining and human trafficking.

Drug trafficking, of course, is not just a Mexican business. In June, U.S. authorities in Philadelphia  a cargo vessel carrying nearly 20 tons of cocaine.

The drug-running ship didn’t belong to the Sinaloa cartel. It was owned by a fund run by banking giant JPMorgan Chase.

Luis Gómez Romero, Senior Lecturer in Human Rights, Constitutional Law and Legal Theory, 51²è¹Ý.

 

This article is republished from  under a Creative Commons license.