Mexico Says It Has Submitted 269 Extradition Requests to the U.S. in the Last 8 Years and Demands "Reciprocity"
27 Articles
27 Articles
Washington has either frozen or denied extradition requests made by Mexico since January 1, 2018, including cases linked to the disappearance of 43 Ayotzinapa students.
The President of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum, and the Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Roberto Velasco, exhibited to the U.S. government, which has refused to extradite Álvarez Puga and Cabeza de Vaca. From Palacio Nacional, Roberto Velasco reported that from January 1, 2018 until May 13, 2026, Mexico has submitted 269 extradition cases to the United States, of which 36 have been denied233 remain outstanding183 correspond to formal extradition reques…
President Claudia Sheinbaum presented a list of people that the United States refused to comply with the request for provisional detention for extradition purposes.
By Uriel Blanco, CNN en Español. Over the past eight years, the Mexican government has made 269 extradition requests to the United States, which has not accepted any of them, the Mexican Foreign Ministry reported Tuesday. Mexico has requested these individuals from the U.S. for the alleged commission of serious crimes in the country, such as organized crime, corruption, or human trafficking, in high-profile cases, for example, the disappearance …
In the midst of the tensions over the 10 Sinaloa officials that the U.S. Department of Justice has demanded for its links with drug trafficking—in which the Black governor Rubén Rocha Moya is present—the Mexican government has shown Washington’s outstanding extradition issues. Since 2018, the Mexican administration has requested the dispatch of 269 people and, to date, none have yet been granted, as explained by President Claudia Sheinbaum, this…
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