Elections or justice? The president of the Senate drops a bomb
The president of the Senate, Laura Itzel Castillo, did not mince words. Faced with the accusations of the United States government against current and former officials of Sinaloa – including Governor Rubén Rocha Moya and Senator Enrique Inzunza – he released a theory that lights up red lights: “We must take into account that next November there will be elections in that country.”
I mean, Uncle Sam using the organized crime file as a campaign weapon? The legislator intentionally dropped the suspicion: “There are many elements that should be considered to obtain votes.”
The FGR has already entered the scene
Castillo recalled that the Attorney General’s Office has already announced its own investigation. We will have to wait. But he did not stop there: he also denounced that the Organic Law of Congress was violated in the installation of the Permanent Commission. The sin? Allowing the opposition to speak out on the issue without prior agreement.
“It is very clear what the law is… but hey, what can we expect?”, he concluded with that tone of someone who has already seen the movie before.
Key fact: requests for arrest for extradition purposes are not just anything. There are eight people in the crosshairs. And the timing, just before the midterm elections in the United States, is no coincidence. Politics, as always, is pure theater. But here the drama has real consequences.




