Chicago brothers who snitched on El Chapo had wealth rivaling ‘LeBron James money’ | MEAWW Who are the Flores Twins? Chicago brothers who snitched on El Chapo had wealth rivaling ‘LeBron James money’
Exactly how the Flores twins were introduced to the Sinaloa cartel is not publicly known, but records show they had made a connection by the late 1990s when they were still in their late teens. In 2004, in the wake of a federal investigation into their drug trafficking in Milwaukee, the twins moved their operation to Mexico.
It mentions that he had been hospitalized for a tooth abscess but “was returned to his institution” last week. The Flores brothers, known as the Twins, pleaded guilty to drug charges in 2014 and were given relatively light prison sentences of 14 years.
Pedro Flores (left) and his twin brother Margarito Flores, once Chicago’s biggest drug traffickers, rose from street-level Chicago drug dealers to the top of the cartel world — and, when they got caught, helped bring down Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman Loera, the Mexican drug kingpin who headed the Sinaloa cartel.
When will the Flores brothers be released?
By DiMaiolo Santolo May 21, 2020. Pedro “Little Pete” Flores (left), and Margarito “Junior” Flores. Junior has asked the court for a compassionate release. The Feds are extremely concerned that the Flores brothers have a significant amount of hidden assets awaiting their release from prison.
The brothers were each sentenced to 14 years behind bars however, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons website, Junior only has till November to complete his sentence. According to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the Flores brothers are “the two most important informants in U.S. history.”.
A note found at the scene confirmed that he had been killed by the Sinaloa Cartel because “his sons were rats.”. Margarito Flores Sr was killed in 2009 by the Sinaloa Cartel because his sons, Pedro “Little Pete” Flores and Margarito “Junior” Flores cooperated with the U.S government, eventually leading to the arrest of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.
In 2008, after Junior Flores agreed to cooperate with the federal government, he visited El Chapo in the northern mountains of Mexico. In the year or so that followed, the Feds recorded over 75 phone conversations the brothers had with El Chapo, many of them discussing the arrangements and plans for drug shipments into the U.S.
During the brothers’ sentencing hearing in 2015, the presiding judge, U.S. District Judge Ruben Castilla, made his position clear that he doubted they had turned over all their assets. At the time, the prosecutors backed the Flores brothers’ claim that they had. In 2008, the Flores brothers cut a deal with prosecutors and surrendered …
Pedro “Little Pete” Flores and Margarito “Junior” Flores, were the top distribution lieutenants in the United States for the Sinaloa Cartel’s infamous Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman Loera.
What happened to the Flores brothers?
The Flores brothers, known as the Twins, pleaded guilty to drug charges in 2014 and were given relatively light prison sentences of 14 years. Pedro Flores testified against Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman Loera during his trial in Brooklyn, which led to a life prison term for him.
The document says Flores is “currently serving his sentence in an institution within the Bureau of Prisons (BOP), the location of which remains undisclosed” to protect his safety.
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Where were the Flores born?
Born and raised in Chicago’s Little Village neighborhood , the Flores’ rise in the narcotics world was due in part because of their older brother, Armando, who was arrested in Chicago in 1998 on federal narcotics charges after selling drugs out of a Cicero car dealership. When he went to prison, the twins stepped in and started selling themselves, …
That changed last year, however, when the twins asked to be released from prison early due to the COVID-19 pandemic that was ravaging the federal prison population. In a motion last fall, prosecutors wrote, “the government no longer holds the view that all recoverable proceeds were turned over.”. Born and raised in Chicago’s Little Village …
According to the nine-count indictment, the Flores’ wives maintained portions of their husbands’ drug proceeds at multiple locations over the course of more than 12 years, including Laura Lopez’s residence in Chicago and Armando Flores’ residence in Texas, and used the money for the benefit of themselves, the incarcerated husbands, and others.
The wives of Chicago twins Pedro and Margarito Flores, who cooperated against Sinaloa cartel kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, were arrested Tuesday on money laundering charges alleging they helped hide and spend hundreds of thousands of dollars of their husbands’ drug proceeds over more than a decade.
It’s unclear where their wives were arrested or where they would appear in court. Laura Lopez and Finnigan appeared before a magistrate judge in Chicago on Tuesday afternoon where they each entered not guilty pleas.