
Key cartel member with $1 million US bounty on his head is killed, says Mexican government
Jorge Humberto Figueroa Benítez, identified by the United States government as a key member of the 'Los Chapitos' criminal organization, died during an operation aimed at capturing him in the Mexican state of Sinaloa, the country's Secretary of Security and Citizen Protection Omar García Harfuch said Saturday.
The operation against Figueroa Benitez, known by the nickname 'El Perris,' took place in Navolato, 32 kilometers (19 miles) from Culiacán, the state's capital, according to local media.
The US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) was offering up to $1 million for Figueroa Benitez, who was wanted for alleged federal crimes, including conspiracy to import and traffic fentanyl, possession of machine guns and destructive devices, and money laundering conspiracy.
In 2019, the city of Culiacán was the scene of a violent episode known as the 'Culiacanazo,' which involved violent armed clashes following the temporary capture of Ovidio Guzmán Lopez, one of the sons of Joaquín 'El Chapo' Guzmán. Ovidio was later released by Mexican authorities, arguing that it was to 'save lives.'
After being extradited to the US in 2023, Ovidio Guzmán pleaded not guilty to charges of drug trafficking and money laundering, although now, according to court documents reviewed by CNN, he is expected to change that plea.
In early May, a US government source told CNN that several of his relatives crossed the border from Mexico into the United States at the San Ysidro port of entry, reportedly as part of an agreement with the US Department of Justice.
CNN does not know the whereabouts of these people or whether they entered any witness protection program. CNN has requested comment from US Customs and Border Protection and the Department of Justice.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
4 hours ago
- New York Times
Louis Diaz, Undercover Agent Who Busted a Drug Kingpin, Dies at 79
Nicky Barnes was 'Mr. Untouchable.' That's how he, a brazen narcotics kingpin from Harlem, was identified on a cover of The New York Times Magazine in June 1977, and for good reason. He had been arrested more than a dozen times at that point, but the charges had rarely stuck. Mr. Barnes was so brimming with bravado that when he was told by the magazine editors that his police mug shot would run with the profile, he agreed to pose for a formal, more flattering portrait. But his good fortune was about to run out, thanks in part to the undercover investigative efforts of Louis Diaz, a fearless, fractious agent for the federal Drug Enforcement Administration and a Brooklyn-born former boxer. His work helped ensure Mr. Barnes's conviction that December and a sentence of life in prison — a penalty demanded by federal prosecutors, who had been galvanized by their bosses in Washington. Many months earlier, President Jimmy Carter had become so incensed that a drug lord was cavalierly violating the law — getting away with murder, in fact — that he ordered the Justice Department to, figuratively, place a target on Mr. Barnes's back. The attorney general energized the D.E.A., which enlisted Mr. Diaz to go under cover. His superiors deliberately chose a white man because, they figured, Mr. Barnes would be expecting his heroin-trafficking ring to be infiltrated by an agent who, like him, was Black. Posing as a part-time hit man and the cousin of a mob wannabe, and tooling around New York in a garish yellow Cadillac, Mr. Diaz used Mr. Barnes's own henchmen to insinuate himself into the ring, headquartered in Harlem. The operation had imported tons of heroin and had laundered tens of millions of dollars in drug profits. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


Washington Post
4 hours ago
- Washington Post
Close ally of drug kingpin 'El Mencho' gets 30 years in prison as US ramps up pressure on cartels
WASHINGTON — A close ally of fugitive Jalisco New Generation boss known as 'El Mencho' for years orchestrated a prolific drug trafficking operation, using a semi-submersible and other methods to avoid detection, and provided weapons to one of Mexico's most powerful cartels, prosecutors say. On Friday, José González Valencia, was sentenced in Washington's federal court to 30 years in a U.S. prison following his 2017 arrest at a beach resort in Brazil while vacationing with his family under a fake name.


New York Times
4 hours ago
- New York Times
Luis Diaz, Undercover Agent Who Busted a Drug Kingpin, Dies at 79
Nicky Barnes was 'Mr. Untouchable.' That's how he, a brazen narcotics kingpin from Harlem, was identified on a cover of The New York Times Magazine in June 1977, and for good reason. He had been arrested more than a dozen times at that point, but the charges had rarely stuck. Mr. Barnes was so brimming with bravado that when he was told by the magazine editors that his police mug shot would run with the profile, he agreed to pose for a formal, more flattering portrait. But his good fortune was about to run out, thanks in part to the undercover investigative efforts of Louis Diaz, a fearless, fractious agent for the federal Drug Enforcement Administration and a Brooklyn-born former boxer. His work helped ensure Mr. Barnes's conviction that December and a sentence of life in prison — a penalty demanded by federal prosecutors, who had been galvanized by their bosses in Washington. Many months earlier, President Jimmy Carter had become so incensed that a drug lord was cavalierly violating the law — getting away with murder, in fact — that he ordered the Justice Department to, figuratively, place a target on Mr. Barnes's back. The attorney general energized the D.E.A., which enlisted Mr. Diaz to go under cover. His superiors deliberately chose a white man because, they figured, Mr. Barnes would be expecting his heroin-trafficking ring to be infiltrated by an agent who, like him, was Black. Posing as a part-time hit man and the cousin of a mob wannabe, and tooling around New York in a garish yellow Cadillac, Mr. Diaz used Mr. Barnes's own henchmen to insinuate himself into the ring, headquartered in Harlem. The operation had imported tons of heroin and had laundered tens of millions of dollars in drug profits. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.