Tuesday, February 09, 2016

ACTRESS KATE DEL CASTILLO IS READY TO TALK ABOUT HER TIES TO ‘EL CHAPO’ GUZMAN, BUT THERE’S A CATCH

Castillo, who is suspected of establishing her tequila business with money from El Chapo, feels betrayed by Sean Penn

By Amanda Macias and Christopher Woody

Business Insider
February 5, 2016

Mexican actress Kate del Castillo, who has been drawn into the sordid case around recently recaptured kingpin Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, is ready to talk about her ties to the drug boss, but she says she won't go to Mexico to do it.

According to her US attorney, Harland Braun, del Castillo is willing to talk about her relationship with Guzmán, "but only if quizzed on US soil," AFP reports.

Del Castillo, 43, has US citizenship and lives in Los Angeles, which has so far hindered the Mexican government's efforts to reach her.

"Obviously if they want to talk to her, they can come here, through the US government, and she'll be happy to talk," Braun told AFP.

"If the Mexican government wants to talk to her," he added, "they can call the US government and the US government arranges it."

Del Castillo, at the center of a Mexican money-laundering investigation after she helped Hollywood star Sean Penn interview Guzmán in October, said Mexico's government wanted to "destroy her," Univision reported in late January.

Mexican Attorney General Arely Gomez has said there were "indications" the actress may have used money from Guzmán to help finance her tequila business.

Del Castillo's tequila even got a mention in Penn's rambling Rolling Stone piece, which was published the day after Guzmán was apprehended.

"The flight had been just bumpy enough that each of us had taken a few swigs off a bottle of Honor tequila, a new brand that Kate is marketing," Penn wrote.

"I have no reason to give explanations to the press. If I don't talk, it's because my lawyers told me not to because the government wants to destroy me," the actress said in a message to Univision, which published the comment on its website in late January.

Braun insisted to AFP that his client and Guzman were in contact only over a movie project and that the government's inquest was politically motivated.

"There's no money (involved) and the Mexican government knows that," Braun said. "They're just embarrassed they let (him) escape twice."

An official for Mexico's attorney general's office declined to comment on del Castillo's remarks about trying to destroy her but noted that Gomez had guaranteed that the presumption of innocence would be respected.

Del Castillo's father said in mid-January that his daughter would testify at the Mexican consulate in Los Angeles, where she would present proof "she is clean."

The daughter of actor Eric del Castillo, she is considered television royalty in Mexico, with a career spanning more than 20 years and the connections to bring Guzmán's movie to life.

For del Castillo, art imitates life, as she played merciless drug lord Teresa Mendoza in the popular soap opera "La Reina del Sur," meaning "The Queen of the South."

A Mexican official told the Associated Press that Guzmán's October interview with Penn, which was brokered by del Castillo, eventually led authorities to the then-fugitive drug lord.

Authorities found DVD copies of del Castillo's telenovela inside Guzmán's hideout during the January 8 raid, dubbed operation "Black Swan," that eventually led to his capture.

According to Penn, Guzmán began plotting Hollywood fame while incarcerated in Altiplano prison.

"He was interested in seeing the story of his life told on film, but would entrust its telling only to Kate (del Castillo)," Penn wrote.

"The same lawyer again tracked her down, this time through the Mexican equivalent of the Screen Actors Guild, and the imprisoned drug lord and the actress began to correspond in handwritten letters and BBM messages," Penn continued in his Rolling Stone piece.

Del Castillo, according to her lawyer, has said she feels "betrayed" and "used" by Penn in his effort to secure an interview with Guzmán.

"She and Penn were going down there to talk about a movie project," Braun told AFP. "He then makes a secret deal with the magazine to write an article and he tells a lot of people about the trip."

"This has made her feel very betrayed," the attorney told the AP this week.

EDITOR’S NOTE: A government source told Fox News that both U.S. and Mexican agents had been monitoring the meet-up between El Chapo, del Castillo, and Penn. Mexican agents wanted to go in, but the U.S. didn't want to endanger Penn. “The Mexican military wanted to go in and get El Chapo, but the State Department did not want them to, because it would put Americans in danger. The State Department applied pressure to delay the siege until Penn and his crew were gone."

By all means, let’s not endanger an actor who is an activist for far-left causes.

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