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The chief hit man of legendary drug kingpin Pablo Escobar says 'El Chapo is a dead man'

Aug 29, 2015, 21:29 IST

In this June 27, 2006, file photo, John Jairo Velasquez, a former hit man for Pablo Escobar, gives his testimony while holding a book titled AP Photo/ William Fernando Martinez

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Jhon Jairo Velásquez Vásquez, alias "Popeye," is one of few surviving members of Pablo Escobar's Medellin cartel. He served as the infamous drug kingpin's head of assassins.

In an interview with the Mexican news magazine Proceso, Popeye, who is a year removed from a 23-year prison term, said Mexican drug lord Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán would not be captured, but killed, should authorities try to apprehend him again.

Though Popeye thinks El Chapo could be found through a joint effort between uncorrupted police and military forces, American agents, and cooperative criminal elements, he said it would not be "convenient" for the Mexican government or for El Chapo if the fugitive drug lord survived.

Popeye also said he believed it would take Mexican authorities 16 to 18 months to track down El Chapo.

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Mexico National Security Commission

He noted that this was the likely period of time it would take to track down the drug lord's finances, family network, and security apparatus. He said it was the kind of work that would proceed by millimeters, "but what they give to him, they give to him, because it is a political matter for the Mexican government. Of honor."

Read an excerpt from Proceso's interview (in Spanish) here.

Popeye has voiced his opinion on the drug war in the past. In 2013, while he was still locked up in a maximum-security prison in Colombia, he told reporters from Der Spiegel that the drug war was most likely unwinnable - and possibly unendable:

Popeye's former boss ran the Medellin cartel, the most powerful and most feared drug cartel in the world for much of the 1980s and 1990s.

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AP

Under Escobar's leadership, the cartel waged a violent battle with the Colombian government, killing hundreds of government officials, police officers, prosecutors, judges, journalists, and innocent bystanders in the process.

"El Chapo" Guzmán has, many believe, assumed Escobar's role as the world's most powerful kingpin. His Sinaloa cartel has a global reach, reportedly delivering cocaine and heroin to Europe and the Middle East.

And the DEA said in 2013 that his organization was doing $3 billion a year in business routing drugs to the Chicago region of the US.

As is perhaps fitting for an heir to Escobar's empire, El Chapo's Sinaloa cartel controls 35% of the cocaine coming out of Colombia, a market share it maintains control over by partnering with many of Colombia's violent criminal gangs, which are themselves descendants of the Colombian cartels.

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And, in one of the dark ironies so common in the decades-long drug war, the Colombian officials who were instrumental in hunting down and killing Escobar on a Medellin rooftop on December 3, 1993, were dispatched to Mexico in the days after El Chapo's escape to assist with the search.

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