White House: Drug boss' boasts are 'maddening'
January 10, 2016Joaquin "Chapo" Guzman said he supplied "more heroin, methamphetamine, cocaine and marijuana than anybody else in the world" in an interview published by "Rolling Stone" magazine after his arrest earlier this week.
"I have a fleet of submarines, airplanes, trucks and boats," Guzman told Hollywood star Sean Penn, who met the drug boss while he was still in hiding.
On Sunday, Barack Obama's chief of staff Denis McDonough described Guzman's boasts as "maddening."
"One thing I will tell you is that this braggadocios action about how much heroin he sends around the world, including the United States, is maddening," McDonough said on CNN's "State of the Union."
"We see a heroin epidemic, an opioid addiction epidemic, in this country," McDonough added. "We're going to stay on top of this with our Mexican counterparts until we get that back in the box. But El Chapo's behind bars - that's where he should stay."
The US president Obama plans to address the heroin epidemic in his State of the Union speech on Tuesday night.
Yearning for Hollywood
The Oscar-winning actor Sean Penn met Guzman in October, months after the drug lord's famous escape from a maxim security prison. The drug trafficker also reached out to other actors and produces in hope of making a movie about himself.
The secretive meeting was arranged through Mexican actress Kate del Castillo, known for her television portrayal of a female drug lord.
Penn described the trip in the Saturday edition of the "Rolling Stone" magazine, saying that the journey included a seven-hour truck ride through the jungle.
The interview and Guzman's desire to make a biopic helped Mexican authorities to track the fugitive down, despite Penn's effort to keep the meeting secret.
'Interesting questions' for Sean Penn
Prosecutors in Mexico now want to talk to Penn and Del Castillo, a Mexican federal official told the AFP news agency on Sunday.
"That is correct, of course - it's to determine responsibilities," the official said, without providing more details.
A second official said it was unclear whether Penn and del Castillo committed a crime.
A reporter could interview a drug cartel suspect, the official argued, but noted, "They're not journalists."
White House official McDonough avoided answering whether the US would hand Penn over for questioning.
"Well, it poses a lot of very interesting questions both for him and for others involved in this so-called interview, so we'll see what happens on that - I'm not going to get ahead of it," he said in his television appearance.
dj/gsw (AFP, Reuters, AP)