Drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman is escorted by marines to a helicopter at Mexico City's airport on January 8, 2016. OMAR TORRES / AFP - Getty Images
Nieto on Friday thanked the agencies that he said conducted "months of careful and detailed intelligence work" and worked "for days and nights tirelessly to accomplish the mission that I have asked them to do."
"Our institutions have shown once again that the citizens can trust these institutions," Nieto said. "Our institutions are good enough. They have the determination."
"Mexico is very proud," Nieto said. "We're going to continue to fight organized crime."
Since the Altiplano escape, 23 prison officials and employees have been arrested, and several of Guzman's Sinaloa underlings have been rounded up. The getaway damaged relations between Mexican and American anti-drug authorities, who had warned that Guzman's associates would try to break him out of Altiplano.
After fleeing the prison, Guzman traveled by land to the city of Queretaro, where officials say he caught a small plane to a mountainous region of Sinaloa, his home state and stronghold, Attorney General Arely Gomez
has said . A second plan also took off in an apparent attempt to throw off pursuers.
The escape was organized by a member of Guzman's legal team who had access to Altiplano and was able to keep his boss updated on the plan's progress, authorities have said.
A Guzman brother-in-law is also believed to have supervised construction of the tunnel. A third conspirator allegedly negotiated the purchase of the plot of land where the tunnel emerged.
Marines
nearly captured Guzman in October after U.S. drug agents intercepted cell phone signals that led them to a ranch in the Sierra Madre Mountains in western Mexico, sources told NBC News at the time. But the government forces were turned back by heavy gunfire, and Guzman was able to flee. Officials believe he was injured in that near-miss.
A U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration statement said El Chapo's capture was "a victory for the rule of law and the Mexican people and government."
U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch commended the Mexican government for the arrest. "Guzman's latest attempt to escape has failed, and he will now have to answer for his alleged crimes, which have resulted in significant violence, suffering and corruption on multiple continents," she said in a statement.
Drug lord El Chapo
Guzman, believed to be about 60, has long been a popular anti-hero in Sinaloa and across Mexico for dodging death and evading bullets while turning the multibillion-dollar Sinaloa cartel into the world's most powerful — and ruthless — drug trafficking organization.
His exploits are chronicled in folk songs. Young people in his impoverished home state
rally in support of him , despite his being responsible for the murders of thousands of Mexicans, including police officers and innocent civilians. Secretive and nearly illiterate, Guzman oversaw the explosion of subterranean networks used to smuggle massive amounts of narcotics across the U.S. border. After his 2001 escape, he
outfitted many his safe houses with secret doors that opened to tunnels leading to municipal sewer systems. He used one of them, accessed through the bottom of a bathtub , to shake authorities in February 2014. Guzman was
caught a few days later , an arrest that was hailed as a major victory in the international war on drugs. He ended up in Altiplano, where he began planning the July escape.
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