



CULIACAN, Mexico >> Inside a sports arena in Sinaloa state’s capital, the crowd was sparse early on the card as young amateur boxers in puffy headgear threw punches and danced about the ring. Outside stood a bronze statue of Julio César Chávez in boxing trunks, one glove raised.
The event Friday was organized by one of Chávez’s brothers and “The Legend” himself was advertised as a specially invited guest. But Chávez didn’t appear. It had been a difficult week for the family.
Chávez’s eldest son, Julio César Chávez Jr., was arrested by U.S. immigration agents outside his home in Los Angeles on Wednesday, accused of overstaying his visa and lying on a green card application.
But more significant here in Culiacan was that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security also noted that there was an active warrant for his arrest in Mexico for alleged arms and drug trafficking and suggested ties to the Sinaloa Cartel. The agency said he would be processed for expedited removal.
The Legend
The name Julio César Chávez in Culiacan is like saying Diego Maradona in Argentina. People stop and conversations begin.
Chávez is the city’s idol and source of pride, known simply as “The Legend.” He went from a working class neighborhood along train tracks to the highest echelons of boxing fame and became a national hero.
But when the questions turn to Chávez’s eldest son and the Sinaloa Cartel, conversation ends and eyes avert.
There was a time when many in Culiacan would speak of the cartel that carries their state’s name, perhaps with euphemisms, but openly all the same, because its control was complete and for that they largely lived in peace.
But since a bloody feud erupted between factions of the cartel last year, following the abduction of Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada to the United States by one of the sons of former leader Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, it’s safer to avoid any mention at all.
Alleged cartel ties
In the stands Friday night, the arrest of The Legend’s son, was on the minds of many, but discussed only in hushed voices.
Óscar Arrieta, a sports reporter in Culiacan, covers boxing and said Chávez Jr.’s arrest had had a big impact in Culiacan, largely because the “harsh” way U.S. authorities linked him to organized crime.
U.S. authorities did not detail the alleged ties between Chávez Jr. and the cartel other than to mention that he married a U.S. citizen who is the mother of a granddaughter of Guzmán.
He mused at why if there had been a Mexican arrest warrant since 2023, hadn’t there been any effort to capture him. He was a very public figure, active on social media and for the past six months or more, training for a highly promoted fight in California.
On Friday, Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum said that he had mostly been in the U.S. since the arrest warrant was issued.