A ruling on extraditing a woman who is on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted
fugitives list for the killing of her ex-boyfriend's new girlfriend in Texas could come anywhere from two to 12 months from now, a Mexican official said Saturday.The federal official, who was not authorized to be named discussing the
matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity, said the United
States has a
60-day window to formally request the extradition of Brenda Delgado, who was captured by Mexican agents in the city of Torreon, in the northern state of Coahuila.
60-day window to formally request the extradition of Brenda Delgado, who was captured by Mexican agents in the city of Torreon, in the northern state of Coahuila.
At that point the process that could be as quick as two months if she
does not challenge extradition, or up to a year if she does.
Delgado, 33, was being held at a Mexico
City prison, the Mexican Attorney General's Office said Friday. She
faces charges of capital murder and unlawful flight to avoid prosecution
in connection with the September death of Dr. Kendra Hatcher, a
dentist.
Dallas County District Attorney Susan Hawk told Dallas-Fort Worth
television station KTVT that an extradition agreement between Mexico and
the U.S. requires that the death penalty not be allowed. Hawk said
Delgado faces life in prison, if convicted.
Hatcher, 35, was gunned down in the parking garage of her Dallas
apartment complex. Prosecutors allege that Delgado hired two accomplices
— one of them the gunman — to carry out the hit. Both alleged
accomplices are in custody.
Delgado told one of them she was connected with a cartel and could
provide him with a steady source of drugs if he carried out the killing,
according to an FBI statement.
"He thought he had an in with the cartel," Dallas police Detective Lee Thompson said, according to the statement.
It's believed that Delgado fled the country shortly after Dallas
investigators questioned her about the killing, federal authorities
said.
Investigators say Delgado was jealous because Hatcher was dating her
ex-boyfriend and had recently been introduced to his parents.
The boyfriend had dated Delgado for about two years before his relationship with Hatcher.
The FBI has named more than 500 people to the agency's most-wanted list
since it was established in 1950. Delgado, who is a Mexican citizen, is
just the ninth woman to make the list.
It was only Wednesday when the FBI announced that she had been added to
the list, calling her a "master manipulator." A reward of $100,000 was
offered for her capture, but it wasn't clear whether it will be paid
based on a tip.
The Mexican government said that after it received a capture request
from U.S. authorities, its Agency of Criminal Investigation deployed
teams to look for Delgado in places where she had family or relatives
that could have helped her: in the states of San Luis Potosi, Nuevo Leon
and Mexico, as well as in Mexico City.
The Attorney General's Office said she was tracked down in Torreon,
which is about 190 miles (300 kilometers) west of Nuevo Leon state, with
unspecified cooperation from U.S. authorities.
Delgado was located at a private home on a narrow residential street of
blocky, one- and two-story homes that invariably have bars on windows
and gates.
Agency officers attached to Interpol took her to the Santa Marta Acatitla prison in the Mexican capital.
Mexico has extradited a number of its citizens to the United States over
the years, notably including top drug cartel leaders. Notorious Sinaloa
cartel capo Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, for one, is currently battling
his own extradition in the courts.
Capital punishment has been abolished in Mexico, and the country seeks
assurances that suspects will not face the death penalty in the U.S.
before agreeing to send them there.
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