MEXICO CITY — The governor of Mexico’s northern Sinaloa state said that he would temporarily resign after the United States charged him and nine other officials with drug trafficking in a bombshell indictment that has shaken the political establishment. In a short video announcement posted at midnight Friday, Gov. Rubén Rocha Moya, a high-ranking member of Mexico’s progressive ruling party Morena, denied accusations that he protected the powerful Sinaloa cartel and helped it smuggle drugs into the U.S. in exchange for millions of dollars in bribes. “My conscience is clear,” he said. “To my people and to my family, I can look you in the eye because I have never betrayed you, and I never will.” But he said he would take “temporary leave” from his post as governor to defend himself against what he called the “false and malicious” allegations and cooperate with the investigation launched by the government of President Claudia Sheinbaum to determine whether he should be arrested or extradited to the U.S. Sheinbaum, who has struggled to strike a balance between the interests of her party and pressure from President Donald Trump step up the fight against cartels, has so far refused to hand over Rocha
Lean: 0.050 · Source quality 50/100 · Factual vs opinion 80/100.
The Washington Times · 12h
The Guardian · 39m
© 2026 Vistoa. All rights reserved.
Limited excerpts, attribution, analysis, and outbound publisher links remain core product boundaries.