Monday, January 27, 2025 - An American drug cartel ringleader has been captured after his wife shared luxury holiday photos online, giving away his location.
Luis Manuel Picado Grijalba, 43, was arrested at a London
airport in December after he was accused of shipping cocaine from Limón, Costa
Rica to the US, Nicaragua’s La Prensa reported.
Grijabla, who goes by his alias “Shock,” was wanted by the US Drug Enforcement Administration for several months for his alleged involvement in international drug trafficking, said Randall Zúñiga the director of Costa Rica’s Judicial Investigation Department (OIJ).
Grijabla, who is a naturalized Costa Rican citizen, met his
wife in Paris and had planned to ring in the New Year with his family in
England before his arrest.
To document the vacation, Grijabla’s wife, Estefania
McDonald Rodriguez, made several posts to a now-deleted Instagram account
during her European travels, according to The Sun.
One post captured the couple posing underneath the Eiffel Tower in Paris.
Zúñiga said that Rodriguez frequently travelled abroad and
posted about her adventures across her social media platforms, the outlet
added.
She boasted about her vacations on sunny beaches, where she
was spotted holding two parrots, and in Rome where she sat in front of the
famed Trevi Fountain.
DEA agents, who had been tracking Grijabla since he took off
from Costa Rica’s Juan Santamaría Airport, used the post of the couple in Paris
to the suspected drug kingpin’s location, Costa Rican outlet Teletica
reported.
The arrest was approved after the DEA obtained an
international warrant.
The American agency wanted to capture Grijabla in Europe
instead of Costa Rica as the Central American nation prohibits extradition of
its citizens in the country.
Grijabla was in court the day after his arrest and is
currently fighting his extradition to the US, where he could face a long jail
sentence, the Sun reported.
Costa Rica’s Attorney General Carlo Diaz praised the DEA’s
arrest but noted his office did not have any charges against Grijabla.
“For us, it is also an important capture, because we had not yet been able to attribute any criminal act to him in our country, but I repeat, he has been linked in some investigations to drug trafficking in Limón,” Díaz, according to Teletica.
The international capture divided officials in the country,
with President Rodrigo Chaves Robles and Security Minister Mario Zamora
questioning the OIJ.
“It is outrageous that the Costa Rican police, I mean the
Judicial Investigation Agency, the Judiciary, and the Attorney General’s
Office, with everyone knowing what Shock does, do not even have an open case
against him, while the gringos leave the country and capture him in London.
What do the gringos have that the OIJ does not have? Is it decency?” Chaves
questioned, according to La Teja.
Zúñiga rebutted saying the DEA had an incentive to capture
the people suspected of harming its country’s citizens.
“There is an investment. The rulers are crystal clear that
the DEA is very important to prevent the scourge of drugs,” he said.
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