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Mexico probes possible money tie between actress, "El Chapo"

MEXICO CITY -- There are indications that drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman had business dealings with actress Kate del Castillo, who arranged a meeting between the drug boss and actor Sean Penn, Mexico's attorney general said in an interview published Tuesday.

Arely Gomez told the newspaper El Universal that officials are investigating possible money laundering involving the actress' tequila business. But she said they don't have "legal certainty" a crime was committed.

Actress breaks silence on El Chapo meeting with Sean Penn 02:03

Del Castillo arranged Penn's Oct. 2 interview with Guzman, which was published by Rolling Stone magazine on Jan. 9, a day after the fugitive Guzman was recaptured.

Gomez said officials want to question del Castillo, possibly at a Mexican consulate in the United States, where she lives.

"We have an investigation in the tequila case," Gomez said, adding that information leads officials to believe the leader of the Sinaloa drug cartel gave funds to that business.

Gomez said Penn was not under investigation for any crime.

Del Castillo hasn't replied to requests for comment but she responded to criticism about her meeting last week via Twitter.

Authorities say the meeting between Penn, del Castillo and Guzman helped them locate the drug lord, though he managed to escape capture at that time. Three months later, Mexican marines raided a safe house in the city of Los Mochis and Guzman was arrested after fleeing through a storm sewer.

Why did Sean Penn want to meet El Chapo? 02:24

Guzman is being held in the same maximum security prison he escaped from through a mile-long tunnel in July.

Gomez said authorities are also investigating del Castillo's spending for the trip to meet Guzman.

"We have to make sure who provided the airplane, who paid for it, all of the logistics of the trip," Gomez said.

Guzman is facing extradition to the U.S. Gomez said Mexico had decided to extradite Guzman, though other officials have said the process could take months.

Meanwhile, Mexican prison officials in charge of preventing Guzman from escaping incarceration for a third time are taking extreme measures, according to a report in the El Universal newspaper.

Guzman is now being moved around the facility on a regular basis. According to El Universal, he was in seven different cells over the course of his first five nights back at the maximum-security Antiplano prison. They make the cell changes at random, meaning he can spend hours or a couple days in any given location.

The newspaper says prison staff have deployed sniffer dogs trained specifically to detect Guzman's distinct odor, installed hundreds of new cameras, and reinforced the concrete floors of at least some cells with steel.

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