How much Sean Penn's interview with 'El Chapo' played a role in his recapture remains unclear

It has been revealed actor Sean Penn was under surveillance by Mexico intelligence in the run up to his clandestine October 2015 meeting with recently recaptured Sinaloa Cartel leader Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán.

Further details have emerged this week regarding the controversial Rolling Stone interview conducted by US actor Penn. On January 11, Mexican daily El Universal published several grainy photographs showing Penn with his fixer, Mexican actress Kate del Castillo, arriving at Guadalajara airport and meeting members of Guzmán's entourage.

Mexican authorities have further claimed that Castillo's communications with Guzmán and his lawyers had been closely monitored since August 2014. Guzmán first reached out to the television actress after she posted a plea on Twitter in 2012 for the drug lord to "traffic with love," adding she believed "more in Chapo Guzmán than in the governments that hide the truth."

Sinaloa-based newspaper Ríodoce has also revealed that the ultimate location for meeting with Guzmán -- then Mexico's most wanted man -- was an ecological park owned by the Universidad Autónoma de Sinaloa. The park is located near the city of Cosalá on the border between the states of Sinaloa and Durango, in a remote area of northwest Mexico known as "The Golden Triangle."

InSight Crime Analysis

For many observers, Guzmán's use of a university-owned park that includes a museum, hotel, and observatory is yet more evidence suggesting the complicity of local authorities in his protection and concealment. Yet it should come as little surprise he could hold such a meeting in his home state, where his considerable power meant few people would ever speak out.

SEE ALSO: Coverage of El Chapo

Indeed, Penn notes in his piece that when en route to the meeting point, two government soldiers at a military checkpoint backed away from the vehicle, "looking embarrassed," on catching a glance of his fellow passenger, Guzmán's son Alfredo, through the open window.

As for the extent of surveillance, more details have yet to surface about exactly what Mexican authorities knew of this rendezvous. The degree to which Penn's interview played a part in Guzmán's capture remains unclear. Mexican authorities have said it was "essential," with Mexico Attorney General Arely Gomez saying that authorities are also looking into whether Penn and Castillo broke any laws. In response, Penn has wholeheartedly defended his actions, telling The Associated Press that he has "nothin' to hide."

Investigations

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
Prev Next

How the MS13 Got Its Foothold in Transnational Drug Trafficking

How the MS13 Got Its Foothold in Transnational Drug Trafficking

Throughout the continent, the debate on whether or not the Mara Salvatrucha (MS13) gang is working with or for drug traffickers continues. In this investigation, journalist Carlos García tells the story of how a member of the MS13 entered the methamphetamine distribution business under the powerful auspices...

The Lucky ‘Kingpin’: How ‘Chepe Diablo’ Has (So Far) Ridiculed Justice

The Lucky ‘Kingpin’: How ‘Chepe Diablo’ Has (So Far) Ridiculed Justice

José Adán Salazar Umaña is the only Salvadoran citizen currently on the US government's Kingpin List. But in his defense, Salazar Umaña claims is he is an honorable businessman who started his career by exchanging money along the borders between Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras. He does...

El Salvador Prisons and the Battle for the MS13’s Soul

El Salvador Prisons and the Battle for the MS13’s Soul

El Salvador's prison system is the headquarters of the country's largest gangs. It is also where one of these gangs, the MS13, is fighting amongst itself for control of the organization.

Homicides in Guatemala: Analyzing the Data

Homicides in Guatemala: Analyzing the Data

In the last decade, homicides in Guatemala have obeyed a fairly steady pattern. Guatemala City and some of its surrounding municipalities have the greatest sheer number of homicides. Other states, particularly along the eastern border have the highest homicide rates. Among these are the departments of Escuintla...

Homicides in Guatemala: Collecting the Data

Homicides in Guatemala: Collecting the Data

When someone is murdered in Guatemala, police, forensic doctors and government prosecutors start making their way to the crime scene and a creaky, antiquated 20th century bureaucratic machine kicks into gear. Calls are made. Forms are filled out by hand, or typed into computers, or both. Some...

Where Chaos Reigns: Inside the San Pedro Sula Prison

Where Chaos Reigns: Inside the San Pedro Sula Prison

In San Pedro Sula's jailhouse, chaos reigns. The inmates, trapped in their collective misery, battle for control over every inch of their tight quarters. Farm animals and guard dogs roam free and feed off scraps, which can include a human heart. Every day is visitors' day, and...

Colombia's Mirror: War and Drug Trafficking in the Prison System

Colombia's Mirror: War and Drug Trafficking in the Prison System

Colombia's prisons are a reflection of the multiple conflicts that have plagued the country for the last half-century. Paramilitaries, guerrillas and drug trafficking groups have vied for control of the jails where they can continue to manage their operations on the outside. Instead of corralling these forces...

Nariño, Colombia: Ground Zero of the Cocaine Trade

Nariño, Colombia: Ground Zero of the Cocaine Trade

The department of Nariño in southwest Colombia is the main coca-producing area in the country and in the world. It is a place scarred by poverty and years of armed conflict between guerrillas, the state and paramilitary groups. Perhaps nowhere else in the country are the challenges...

Homicides in Guatemala: Conclusions and Recommendations

Homicides in Guatemala: Conclusions and Recommendations

Olfato. It is a term used quite often in law enforcement and judicial circles in Central America (and other parts of the world as well). It refers to the sixth sense they have as they see a crime scene, investigate a murder or plow through the paperwork...

Homicides in Guatemala: Introduction, Methodology, and Major Findings

Homicides in Guatemala: Introduction, Methodology, and Major Findings

When violence surged in early 2015 in Guatemala, then-President Otto Pérez Molina knew how to handle the situation: Blame the street gangs.