Culture

Mexican attorney linked to botched hit on journalist agrees to extradition from California


Mexican news anchor Ciro Gómez Leyva was driving home from work late one night in December 2022 when a small car veered into the path of his Jeep Cherokee and slowed to a stop. Almost immediately, two people on a motorcycle pulled next to the Jeep and a gunman opened fire with a pistol, spraying 9mm bullets into the Jeep’s driver-side window, windshield and hood.

Gómez, also the host of a popular radio show, survived the attack thanks to his Jeep’s armored plating and bulletproof glass — precautions deemed necessary by some journalists in one of the most dangerous nations in the world for media workers. Thirteen other journalists were killed that same year in Mexico.

Investigators in Mexico City quickly identified suspects and placed them under surveillance, and they soon came to suspect a man nicknamed “El Patrón,” or The Boss, had masterminded the attempted assassination.

On Thursday, that man, a Mexican lawyer named Armando Escárcega Valdez, appeared in federal court in San Diego for what was supposed to be a hearing to establish if Mexico had presented sufficient evidence to warrant his extradition. Instead, Escárcega waived his limited rights and agreed to be surrendered back to Mexico.

Escárcega’s attorney, David Baker, told U.S. Magistrate Judge Daniel Butcher that while his client was not admitting guilt, he agreed there was enough probable cause to meet the extradition requirements.

A Mexican judge issued a warrant for Escárcega’s arrest in January 2023 after investigators raided his home and law office in Mexico City and discovered evidence allegedly linking him to the attack on Gómez and other crimes, according to court documents. Undercover surveillance teams and wiretaps also produced evidence of Escárcega’s alleged involvement planning the attack.

The attorney avoided capture for about nine months, seeking to hide out in the U.S., but he was arrested in October near Bakersfield. He was later brought to San Diego, where a federal judge had issued an arrest warrant related to the extradition request.

Related Articles

Crime and Public Safety |

Reluctant witnesses kick off Oakland cold case triple-murder trial

Crime and Public Safety |

California police offer details of probe into seizure of 75 tons of illegal fireworks

Crime and Public Safety |

Doxxing victims in California may gain right to sue to ‘bring some power back’

Crime and Public Safety |

Parkland school shooter signs away rights to his name. Now, just one survivor owns it

Crime and Public Safety |

Two men sentenced in grisly killing where Baby Yoda doll and AC Transit bus provided …read more

Source:: The Mercury News – Entertainment

      

(Visited 3 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *