Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán was born into poverty in Sinaloa, Mexico, and a childhood marked by his father's violence set him on a path toward the criminal underworld. With no formal education beyond third grade, Guzmán had few legitimate options. Instead, he would build one of history's most powerful and ruthless drug empires.
Guzmán's entry into the drug trade came through family connections. In the 1960s, he began planting marijuana with his cousins in the rugged hills of Sinaloa. By the 1970s, he had graduated to running drugs to major Mexican cities and across the U.S. border. His talent for logistics and his willingness to take risks caught the attention of Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo, the powerful leader of the Guadalajara Cartel. Guzmán became one of Félix Gallardo's trusted operatives, helping map smuggling routes through Sinaloa into the United States and overseeing the cartel's complex drug distribution networks.
When Mexican authorities arrested Félix Gallardo in the late 1980s, the Guadalajara Cartel fractured into rival factions. Guzmán seized the opportunity, taking control of the organization's Pacific coast operations and founding his own cartel in 1988. What began as a regional operation would eventually transform into a multinational enterprise.
Timeline
Gründung des Sinaloa-Kartells
Pedro Avilés Pérez gründet Ende der 1960er-Jahre das Kartell, das später von El Chapo zur Weltmacht ausgebaut wird.
Erste Verhaftung
El Chapo wird im Februar 2014 verhaftet und in ein mexikanisches Hochsicherheitsgefängnis gebracht.
Spektakuläre Gefängnisflucht
El Chapo flieht durch einen 1,5 Kilometer langen Tunnel aus seiner Zelle. Der Tunnel war direkt von seiner Duschkabine aus gegraben worden.
Erneute Festnahme
Nach monatelanger Fahndung wird El Chapo in Los Mochis, Sinaloa, erneut gefasst und später an die USA ausgeliefert.
Verurteilung in den USA
Ein US-Gericht spricht El Chapo in allen Anklagepunkten schuldig und verurteilt ihn zu lebenslanger Haft ohne Bewährung.
Verurteilung von García Luna
Mexikos ehemaliger Sicherheitsminister wird in den USA wegen Annahme von Bestechungsgeldern vom Sinaloa-Kartell verurteilt.
At its peak, the Sinaloa Cartel controlled between 40 and 60 percent of Mexico's entire drug trade, with annual revenues estimated at $3 billion. The cartel's reach was staggering. Guzmán's organization produced and distributed marijuana, heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine. They smuggled multi-ton cocaine shipments from Colombia through Mexico and into the United States via air, sea, and road, maintaining distribution networks across the country. Guzmán arranged deals with Colombian traffickers to move their cocaine through Mexican territory, sometimes accepting payment in the form of cocaine itself—one arrangement involved moving 500 kilos to Los Angeles surrogates.
To move product and evade capture, Guzmán invested in an impressive infrastructure. He owned private jets and employed pilots, operated fleets of trucks, and controlled maritime vessels with their own captains. Most notoriously, he employed Mexican peasants to dig elaborate tunnel systems beneath the border. According to reports, many of these diggers were never seen again after their work was completed. The cartel also laundered more than $14 billion in drug proceeds in collaboration with other major traffickers.
With power came violence. In February 1992, six of Guzmán's top lieutenants were found dumped along Tijuana highways, their bodies bearing signs of torture and gunshot wounds. As the Sinaloa Cartel expanded into territory controlled by rival cartels in the early 2000s, violence escalated dramatically. Federal courts would later allege that Guzmán employed professional assassins to carry out hundreds of violent acts—murders, assaults, kidnappings, and torture operations. In 2014, Guzmán himself claimed responsibility for killing between 2,000 and 3,000 people.
Law enforcement finally caught up with Guzmán on June 9, 1993, when Guatemalan police arrested him on charges of drug trafficking, murder, and kidnapping. He was extradited to Mexico and sentenced to a minimum of 20 years in maximum security prison. But incarceration would not stop him. In 2001, he escaped from his Mexican prison cell.
For 13 years, Guzmán evaded capture as the world's most wanted man until Mexican marines arrested him in 2014. Even that proved temporary. In 2015, he escaped from Altiplano maximum security prison through an extraordinary 4,921-foot tunnel dug from nearly a mile away, which opened directly into his shower stall. His ability to continue running his cartel from behind bars through an elaborate system of bribes demonstrated the deep corruption that enabled his operations.
Guzmán faced federal charges across multiple U.S. jurisdictions and at least 10 legal cases in Mexico, but his continued ability to evade justice for decades underscored the enormous challenges Mexican and American authorities faced in combating at this scale.
