**The former governor of the Mexican state of Quintana Roo has appeared in court in New York charged with plotting to import cocaine and money laundering.**On Sunday, Mario Ernesto Villanueva Madrid became the most senior Mexican politician to be extradited to the US on drugs charges.
He allegedly helped the Juarez cartel smuggle hundreds of tons of cocaine from Colombia through Mexico to the US.
Mr Villanueva was governor of the Caribbean state from 1993 to 1999.
US prosecutor Preet Bharara has accused him of turning Quintana Roo “into a virtual narco-state, selling its infrastructure and even its police to one of the world’s most dangerous mafia enterprises”.
The Mexican prosecutor’s office said he received between $400,000 (£270,000) and $500,000 for each Colombian cocaine shipment transported through his state to the US.
Mr Villanueva was sentenced to six years in prison in Mexico for money laundering in 2001. He was released in 2007, but re-arrested immediately when the US requested his extradition.
He could face life in prison if convicted on the drug charges.This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
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