The Americas | Mexico’s drug gangs

Will El Mayo’s arrest slow the spread of fentanyl?

The United States nets a very big fish

View of the front pages of Mexican newspapers showing the news of the capture of  Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada, in Mexico City, Mexico.
He used to shun the front pagePhotograph: Getty Images

Ismael “EL mayo” zamBada is far less well-known than his fellow founder of Mexico’s Sinaloa Cartel, Joaquín Gúzman, or “El Chapo”. With his daring prison escapes and a craving for notoriety, El Chapo became the face of the gang, until his capture in 2016 and his incarceration for life in a “supermax” prison in the United States. Yet for all his low-key manner, El Mayo was every bit as important in building the Sinaloa operation into a vast and violent drugs and money-laundering syndicate. Its connections ran deep into Mexico’s political establishment and it controlled the lion’s share of the North American market for illegal drugs. It was therefore a stunning coup when the United States arrested Mr Zambada on July 26th along with one of El Chapo’s four sons, Joaquín Gúzman López, in Texas.

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