El Chapo has been in his current digs since January 19th, when he was extradited to the US following his headline-grabbing jailbreak (his second), and since then, the Mexican government claims his Sinaloa Cartel’s sphere of influence has shrunk significantly. At the peak of its power, Sinaloa’s power was felt in 24 out of 32 states in Mexico, and had operations in as many as 50 countries. Admittedly, things were already on a downward trend at the time of his initial capture in January of last year, with Sinaloa operations in just 11 states in Mexico, but since then Sinaloa Cartel territory has shrunk down even more, with territory lost in Colima, Nayarit, and Jalisco, and Yucatan. El Chapo’s capture by authorities created a power vacuum at the top of the most powerful cartel in Mexico, and since then other organizations have fought for and won much of what used to be Sinaloa Cartel territory, often with explosively violent results. As the Sinaloa Cartel has seen allied groups turn against it, violence has increased, and last month saw 182 homicides in Sinaloa, with 2017 having as much as 73 percent more homicides as 2016 in Sinaloa alone. As rival cartels fight for the Sinaloa Cartel’s ceded territory, violence has spiked, and a local magazine editor named Alejandro Sicairos was quoted by AFP on the situation like this last month: In the meantime, El Chapo’s trial is scheduled for April, 2018.