Mexico Places Home Owned by El Chapo in Lottery After It Failed to Sell at Auction
Mexico is placing a home previously owned by former drug kingpin Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán in a national lottery after the house failed to sell at auction last year, the Associated Press reported.
Mexico’s Institute to Return Stolen Goods to the People, known by the initials INDEP, attempted to sell the house at auction last year. Bidding started at about $130,000, but there were no takers.
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador decided to add the home to Mexico’s national lottery, with the drawing scheduled for Wednesday, a day before Mexico’s Independence Day, the AP said. Several seized properties are in the lottery this year, and this is the first time property has been given away in a drawing.
“This raffle is very important, and I call on all the people, those who can help buying a ticket, or two or three,” López Obrador said last week at a news conference. Proceeds from the lottery go to Mexico’s Olympic athletes.
For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below.
Recently, the house Guzmán fled in 2014 when Mexican marines had him surrounded underwent some changes.
The surveillance cameras that covered every angle of the modest home’s exterior were removed. And the hole under a bathtub that Guzmán had slipped through to reach a network of tunnels was covered with a concrete slab.
The AP was given access to the property in a quiet Culiacán neighborhood ahead of the lottery. INDEP gave it a fresh coat of white paint inside and out and tiled over the spot in the bathroom where the tub and tunnel entry point had been.
López Obrador has been talking up the lottery of seized properties but gave no mention to the history of this particular house. An expansive home in one of Mexico City’s swankiest neighborhoods and a private box at the famed Azteca Stadium have garnered more attention.
INDEP’s website lists it only as “Casa en Culiacán.” It’s about 2,800 square feet and located, perhaps appropriately, in a neighborhood called Libertad, or “Freedom.” The government values the two-bedroom home at $183,000.
The house had been abandoned for years, and the marines did some damage when they searched it, so repairs were necessary.
Guzmán escaped that time through the tunnels, but his freedom lasted only days. On February 22, 2014, the marines descended again, this time in a condo on the coast in Mazatlán.
By that time, Guzmán already had a reputation for daring escapes. He had slipped out of one of Mexico’s maximum-security prisons in 2001, allegedly in a laundry cart.
In July 2015, less than a year and a half after his capture in Mazatlán, Guzmán slipped through a tunnel dug up to the drain in his cell’s shower and rode a motorcycle on tracks laid through a tunnel to escape another maximum-security Mexican prison.
The marines captured him again six months later in Los Mochis, Sinaloa, where he had been holed up in another unremarkable home.
Guzmán was extradited to the United States, tried, convicted and sentenced to life in prison in July 2019.
INDEP officials, who declined to be identified because they were not authorized to speak, said they were surprised the house was getting attention. It is not luxurious. There is no swimming pool, none of the ostentation that characterizes other narco properties in Sinaloa.
People nearby said they didn’t know who their neighbor was.
“We never knew anything, we never knew who lived there, we never saw anyone,” said one neighbor, who quickly cut off the conversation. Many locals aren’t interested in speaking of Guzmán or even saying his name in a place where the Sinaloa cartel remains powerful.
The house was well located for its previous purposes. There is a neighbor only on one side. On the other is a subterranean storm sewer—Culiacán built hundreds of kilometers of them to deal with torrential rains—which is where the bathroom tunnel connected to make Guzmán’s escape possible. A school is across the street.
On the morning of February 17, 2014, the neighborhood was suddenly filled with the marines’ grey trucks. They blocked traffic, and there was no doubt they were interested in the seemingly unremarkable house.
But they didn’t find Guzmán there. In fact, during his U.S. trial, a witness testified that Guzmán was not in any of the five houses marines searched, despite reports to the contrary at the time.
Five days later, the marines caught up to Guzmán 125 miles to the south in Mazatlán, where he was staying with his wife Emma Coronel and their twin daughters.
In downtown Mexico City, lottery ticket vendors said sales have been good.
Jorge López said he’s been selling 100 to 120 of the $12 tickets daily since last week. “Right now, it’s selling very well.” He said the value of the 22 prizes, many well above that of the Culiacán house, is drawing attention. Some people ask about who the properties’ previous owners were, but not many, he said.
Back in Culiacán, across town near the center, Ignacio Mariscal said he supports the lottery. “Those houses didn’t serve anyone; those people had them,” Mariscal said. “I see it as perfectly fine. It’s to help people in need.”