Jamaican Drug Lord Seeks Extradition Deal With U.S. After Bloody Battles, 73 Dead
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Desperate to end the bloodbath on the streets of Kingston from four days of shootouts between Jamaican security forces and supporters of a fugitive drug lord, U.S. officials are negotiating his surrender to face federal cocaine trafficking and gun-running charges, the New York Post reported Thursday.
The lawyer of accused drug kingpin Christopher "Dudus" Coke was in contact with U.S. authorities about a voluntary extradition, a source said.
The source speculated that Coke wanted to avoid being killed by Jamaican police and troops who were attacking his stronghold in the capital city.
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At least 73 people were killed in Kingston since Monday, Jamaican police said, as authorities stormed a slum where Coke resides after Prime Minister Bruce Golding decided to extradite him to face trial in New York after months of opposing such a move.
Most of the dead were young men, gang supporters of Coke, who were killed when heavily armed security forces stormed the Tivoli Gardens slum that U.S. prosecutors said served as a "garrison" for his supporters.
Up to 500 people were detained in connection with the search for Coke, reputed head of a criminal organization known as the Shower Posse, which murdered hundreds of people by "showering" them with bullets during the 1980s cocaine wars.
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"Security forces are under extreme pressure now," said Mark Shields, Jamaica's former deputy police commissioner, who now runs a private security firm. "We have urban war going on."
Click here to read more on this story from the New York Post.