Fugitive Mexican drug lord Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman is escorted by the authorities to a Mexican Army helicopter in Los Mochis, Sinaloa, Mexico, 08 January 2016. Picture: EPA/JOSE MENDEZ
Fugitive Mexican drug lord Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman is escorted by the authorities to a Mexican Army helicopter in Los Mochis, Sinaloa, Mexico, 08 January 2016. Picture: EPA/JOSE MENDEZ

MEXICO CITY — Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman snuck into the United States twice to visit relatives while he was a fugitive, one of his daughters told The Guardian newspaper.

Rosa Isela Guzman Ortiz, who lives in California, said her 58-year-old father entered the US state last year shortly after his now-notorious October meeting with US actor Sean Penn, evading a manhunt with the complicity of corrupt Mexican officials.

She did not disclose the exact dates of his visits but told the British daily that Mr Guzman crossed the border to visit relatives and see her five-bedroom house, which he bought for her and her four children. "My dad deposited the money in a bank account with a lawyer and a while after he came to see the house, his house. He came twice," the 39-year-old woman, who has US citizenship and runs small businesses in California, told The Guardian.

She declined to say how the world’s most wanted drug lord managed to enter the United States.

"I asked him the same, believe me," she said.

Mr Guzman’s Sinaloa drug cartel has used sophisticated tunnels to ship massive amounts of narcotics to the United States, so such secret passages would have been available to him.

Ms Guzman Ortiz said her father bought protection at the highest official level, sending representatives to meet with senior politicians.

"All I know is that my dad told his lawyer to deliver some cheques to (a politician’s) campaign, and asked that he respect him," she said, adding that the family was considering releasing copies of the cheques, as well as names of officials and politicians who accepted his support.

Mr Guzman escaped twice from maximum-security prisons.

The first time was in 2001 and he was captured in February 2014. His second escape took place in July last year, using a 1.5-kilometer tunnel in a brazen prison break that left President Enrique Pena Nieto’s administration red-faced.

His daughter claims that Mr Guzman’s second escape had the blessing of senior officials, whom she did not name.

"My dad’s escape was an agreement," she said.

The warden of the Altiplano prison near Mexico City and the head of Mexico’s penitentiary system are among the more than 30 people detained over the escape.

Mr Guzman was sent back to Altiplano following his January 8 recapture.

His lawyer said this week that his client has decided to drop his opposition to extradition to the United States in the hope of negotiating a "relatively reasonable" sentence in a medium-security prison.

AFP