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Mexico Extradites 29 Cartel Suspects to US
Mexican authorities have handed over 29 suspects including drug cartel heavyweights to face U.S. justice. The extraditions mark a rare joint push with American officials to choke off trafficking plaguing both nations. This batch features kingpins tied to fentanyl floods killing thousands stateside yearly.
The transfers took months of quiet talks between Mexico and the Biden-era holdover DOJ. Among them are Sinaloa and Jalisco cartel figures long hunted for pumping drugs across the border. U.S. prosecutors aim to dismantle their networks with stiff sentences.
Mexico’s move signals a thaw after years of spotty cooperation on narco wars. Past leaders balked at extraditions guarding sovereignty or fearing reprisals. Today’s leaders see mutual gain in targeting cartels fueling violence and addiction.
Fentanyl a synthetic opioid 50 times stronger than heroin drives overdose deaths at record highs. Illegal immigrants smuggle much of it over a porous border exploited by cartels. These extraditions aim to cut supply lines and punish those cashing in on the crisis.
The 29 face charges from drug running to money laundering in U.S. courts. Some allegedly oversaw labs churning out millions of lethal doses monthly. Their capture relied on Mexican raids paired with DEA intel a model for future ops.
Critics in Mexico warn extraditions could spark cartel backlash on their soil. Violence already scars cities like Tijuana as factions vie for turf. Still officials argue letting kingpins walk free only emboldens the bloodshed long-term.
The U.S. has leaned on extraditions since the 1990s to nab untouchable bosses abroad. This haul stands out for its scale and the message it sends to traffickers. Cooperation could falter if Mexico’s next regime shifts priorities though.
Border security hawks cheer the move as a win against lawless cartels enabled by weak controls. They say it’s a start but call for tougher walls and patrols to stem the tide. The fight over drugs and borders promises more tension as 2025 looms.
Coverage Details
| Total News Sources | 38 |
| Left | 12 |
| Right | 11 |
| Center | 13 |
| Unrated | 2 |
| Bias Distribution | 34% Center |
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