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A former security chief at the Jalisco prison from which Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán escaped in 2001 testified yesterday that he and other prison officials took bribes from the former drug
lord in exchange for providing him with a range of perks. On his first day on the witness stand at the New York trial of the former Sinaloa Cartel chief, Dámaso López told jurors that among
the privileges afforded to Guzmán while he was locked up in the Puente Grande maximum-security prison were new shoes, a mobile telephone and secret visits with his wife, brother and
brother-in-law. López, who joined the Sinaloa Cartel after resigning from his prison job, said that in exchange he received at least US $10,000, a house valued at 1.5 million pesos and
assistance to pay medical expenses for one of his sons. The witness told jurors that he quit his security job in September 2000 because the federal government was conducting an investigation
into corruption at the prison. However, López said that before he left he had a final meeting with Guzmán, who asked him to speak with the new security chief so that his perks would be
preserved. Known by the nickname “El Licenciado” (The Graduate), López later became a fixer and ultimately a leader in the Sinaloa Cartel. He is believed to have been chosen by Guzmán to be
his successor. However, “El Licenciado” was arrested in Mexico City in May 2017 and extradited last year to the United States, where he pleaded guilty to importing cocaine into the U.S and
was sentenced to life in prison. While López admitted to receiving bribes from Guzmán, he denied that he had anything to do with his escape from the prison in a laundry cart in 2001. The
sole accomplice to the escape was a guard known as “El Chito” who worked in the prison’s laundry section, he said, adding that Guzmán was later upset that other guards were falsely accused
of aiding his breakout. The 52-year-old witness also told the court about several executions that Guzmán allegedly ordered during his years at the helm of the cartel. López is one of many
cartel witnesses who have appeared over the past two months at Guzmán’s trial on charges of trafficking, conspiracy, money laundering and weapons offenses. The former kingpin’s lawyers have
attempted to portray the witnesses as unreliable “degenerates” who are speaking in the hope that their own prison sentences will be reduced. If convicted, Guzmán faces probable life
imprisonment. _Source: Reforma (sp) _