Mexico Extradites 37 Alleged Drug Cartel Members to the United States

Mexican authorities have extradited 37 inmates allegedly linked to major drug cartels to the United States to face trial, following President Trump’s earlier suggestions of potential US land strikes against organised criminal gangs in Mexico.
This marks the third round of extraditions from Mexico to the US in the past year, amid accusations that President Claudia Sheinbaum’s government is appeasing Washington.
Mexico’s Secretary of Security, Omar García Harfuch, said on X that the transferred detainees posed a “threat to the country’s security.” The US Justice Department welcomed the move, describing it as part of a broader strategy to dismantle the cartels. “These 37 cartel members will now face justice on American soil for their crimes against the US,” said Attorney General Pam Bondi.
García Harfuch confirmed that US prosecutors agreed not to seek the death penalty and that the detainees were transported under “National Security Law and bilateral cooperation mechanisms, with full respect for Mexico’s sovereignty.”
The inmates were flown on seven armed Mexican aircraft to Washington, New York, Houston, Pennsylvania, San Diego, and San Antonio.
Mexico previously extradited 26 key cartel operatives last August and a similar group in February, bringing the total sent to the US under Trump’s second administration to 92.
President Sheinbaum’s administration has been pursuing a strong crackdown on drug trafficking and cited a 50% drop in fentanyl seizures at the US southern border in its defence.
Earlier in January, Trump stated that after targeting drug trafficking by sea, “we are going to start now hitting land,” adding that “the cartels are running Mexico.” Last week, Sheinbaum reiterated that US troop deployment on the southern border was “not on the table.”
Since the removal of former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro from Caracas, Trump has issued threats against other regional countries, including Mexico, Cuba, and Colombia.





