The highly effective Ecuadorean gang chief Adolfo Macías Villamar has been extradited to the US to face expenses of drug and arms trafficking.
Generally known as “Fito”, he was recaptured in June, virtually a 12 months after he escaped from a high-security jail the place he was serving a 34-year sentence for a sequence of crimes.
He’ll seem in a US federal court docket on Monday, the place he’ll plead not responsible to worldwide expenses of drug and weapons trafficking, his lawyer instructed Reuters.
Macías was chief of Los Choneros gang, which is linked to highly effective felony organisations from Mexico and the Balkans. He’s additionally suspected of getting ordered the assassination of presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio in 2023.
Los Choneros is blamed for Ecuador’s transformation from a vacationer haven to a rustic with one of many highest homicide charges within the area.
Greater than 70% of all cocaine produced on the planet presently passes by means of Ecuador’s ports. The nation is positioned between the world’s two high cocaine exporters, Colombia and Peru.
In June, police tracked Macías right down to what they described as an underground bunker beneath a luxurious house within the metropolis of Manta. He was taken to La Roca, a most safety jail. On the time, Ecuador’s President Daniel Noboa praised the safety forces for capturing him and mentioned that he could be extradited to the US.
The nation’s jail authority mentioned he was taken out of jail in Ecuador earlier on Sunday to be handed over to US authorities.
“Mr Macías and I’ll seem tomorrow earlier than the Brooklyn federal court docket … the place he’ll plead not responsible,” his lawyer, Alexei Schacht, instructed Reuters. “After, he might be held in a to-be-determined jail.”
Ecuadoreans voted in favor of permitting the extradition of residents in a referendum referred to as by President Noboa, who vowed to crack down on rising crime.
In March this 12 months, Noboa instructed the BBC he needs US, European and Brazilian armies to hitch his “warfare” in opposition to felony gangs.

