The News
Sunday 22 of December 2024

Drug Lord Gains Weight, Reads Books in Prison


el chapo1
el chapo1
Guzmán no longer has a television, but gets free reading material

Drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman is getting some self-help advice and gaining a bit of weight in prison under his new, tighter-security regime, but Mexico’s formerly most wanted man is apparently not doing so well in the love department.

Guzman, who tunneled out of the same prison last July, now has two guards standing outside his cell watching him every minute of the day. There is a dog whose only job is to test his food before he eats it to make sure it’s not poisoned. He no longer has a television, but gets free reading material.

Since he was recaptured in January, Guzman has read the classic “Don Quijote,” and has now started a Spanish-language translation of “The Purpose Driven Life: What on Earth Am I Here for?” by Rick Warren, a California-based evangelical pastor. The self-help book contains quotes that might pertain to Guzman, like “A pretentious, showy life is an empty life; a plain and simple life is a full life.” And “We are products of our past, but we don’t have to be prisoners of it.”

ARCHIVO - En esta imagen de archivo del 8 de enero de 2016 difundida por el gobierno federal de México, Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán posa con el número de preso de 3870 en la prisión de máxima seguridad del Altiplano. Guzmán pidió a su defensa acelerar el proceso de extradición a Estados Unidos para evitar las condiciones en que se encuentra recluido en México, afirmó el miércoles 2 de marzo de 2016 uno de sus abogados. (Gobierno Federal de México vía AP )
There was a spate of complaints by Guzman’s lawyers and relatives who said his health was suffering in prison and that he couldn’t sleep. Photo: AP.

The description of his post-escape prison life comes from a federal official who was not authorized to be quoted by name under official policy. The official and a colleague granted the exclusive interview to The Associated Press following a spate of complaints by Guzman’s lawyers and relatives who said his health was suffering in prison and that he couldn’t sleep.

Before he escaped, Guzman was allowed a four-hour conjugal visit every nine days. In addition, the officials said, he was supplied with Viagra.

But Guzman hasn’t been given Viagra since he was recaptured and returned to the prison on Jan. 8. Nor has he received any conjugal visits. He only applied for permission to renew them this week.

The officials said Guzman has gained a small amount of weight and lowered his blood pressure since he was taken back to the Altiplano prison west of Mexico City.

He is under constant observation from a ceiling-mounted camera which — unlike the one in the cell from which he escaped — has no blind spots.

Guzman’s associates tunneled him out of prison through the thin concrete floor of his shower stall last July in a spot which surveillance cameras were not designed to reach.

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Before he escaped, Guzman was allowed a four-hour conjugal visit every nine days. Photo: Flickr.

The floors of the prison’s top-security cells have since been reinforced with a 16-inch (40-centimeter) bed of concrete with a double layer of rebar.

During his most recent time on the run, Guzman met with Mexican actress Kate del Castillo, purportedly to discuss a project to document his life in a movie.

But Del Castillo said in interview with ABC aired Friday that Guzman may have just been infatuated with her, or the drug-trafficking character she played in a TV series, Teresa Mendoza.

“He probably had a crush on Teresa Mendoza,” Del Castillo told Diane Sawyer. “I think he was never interested in the movie.”

Prosecutors later said her contacts with Guzman, and the October 2015 meeting with Guzman and American actor Sean Penn in a remote area of northeastern Mexico, helped lead them to eventually recapturing the drug lord. A chain of leaked emails between Guzman and Del Castillo suggest authorities were monitoring their text conversations.

Del Castillo said she didn’t know she was under surveillance.

“No, to be honest I didn’t think about it,” she said. “I thought he (Guzman) knew what he was doing by texting.”