MEXICO CITY – One of the top three leaders of Mexicos most powerful drug cartel, Ignacio Nacho Coronel, was killed Thursday in a gunbattle with soldiers, the Mexican army announced.
The death of Coronel, 56, is the biggest strike yet against the Sinaloa cartel led by Joaquin El Chapo Guzman – Mexicos top drug lord – since President Felipe Calderon launched a military offensive against drug traffickers in late 2006.
According to the FBI, which offered a $5 million reward for Coronel, he was believed to be the forerunner in producing massive amounts of methamphetamine in clandestine laboratories in Mexico, then smuggling it into the U.S.
Gen. Edgar Ruiz Villegas said an army raid was closing in one of Coronels safehouses in an upscale suburb of the western city of Guadalajara when the drug lord opened fire on soldiers.
Nacho Coronel tried to escape, and fired on military personnel, killing one soldier and wounding another, Ruiz Villegas said at a news conference in Mexico City. Responding to the attack, this capo died.
Coronels downfall came amid persistent allegations that Calderons administration appeared to be favoring the Sinaloa cartel, not hitting it as hard as other drug gangs.
Those allegations have drawn angry denials from the president and his top law enforcement officials, who point to the 2009 arrest of Vicente El Vicentillo Zambada – the son of Ismael El Mayo Zambada, Sinaloas No. 2 leader – as proof they were going after the gang.
The detention is the biggest blow against Mexicos drug gangs since drug lord Arturo Beltran Leyva and six of his bodyguards were killed in a Dec. 16 raid by Mexican marines in the central city of Cuernavaca.
During Thursdays raid, soldiers also arrested Francisco Quinonez. Ruiz Villegas said Quinonez was Coronels right-hand man.