Mexican actress: Drug lord could be ‘hero of heroes’

Kate del Castillo at LA Latino International Film Festival in July 2011.
Kate del Castillo at LA Latino International Film Festival in July 2011.
  • Actress: "I believe more in El Chapo Guzman than in governments that hide the truth"
  • Kate del Castillo played a crime boss on "Weeds" and a Spanish-language soap opera
  • "Mr. Chapo: Wouldn't it be cool if you started to traffic in goodness?" she writes
  • Singer Ricky Martin re-tweets it, saying "Bravo Kate"

(CNN) -- A well-known Mexican actress who has played crime bosses on television says she trusts the purported head of the Sinaloa cartel more than government officials.

"Today I believe more in El Chapo Guzman than in the governments that hide the truth from me even though it is painful," actress Kate del Castillo said in a message linked to her Spanish-language Twitter account this week.

Del Castillo starred as a drug trafficker in Telemundo's popular prime-time soap opera "La Reina del Sur" ("The Queen of the South") and also played Mexican crime boss Pilar Zuazo on the Showtime series "Weeds."

Her wide-ranging online post -- which outlines the movie star's beliefs on topics such as the goodness of the human race, the Roman Catholic Church and marriage -- came the same week that officials from the U.S. Department of the Treasury called Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman "the world's most powerful drug trafficker."

Guzman, who is accused of running a major network that distributes cocaine and heroin, has been indicted by U.S. authorities in Chicago, New York and Los Angeles. In 2004, the U.S. government announced a $5 million reward for information leading to his arrest and conviction.

Ghastly toll in 2011 Mexico drug violence: 13,000 killed

He is worth about $1 billion, according to Forbes Magazine, which began listing the drug kingpin on its billionaires list in 2009. The magazine ranks him as No. 55 on its Most Powerful People list.

Del Castillo's online post addresses the drug lord directly:

"Mr. Chapo: Wouldn't it be cool if you started to traffic in goodness? With cures for diseases, with food for children in the street, with alcohol for nursing homes. ... trafficking with corrupt politicians instead of with women and children that end up as slaves? With burning all the pimps that treat a woman like she's worth no more than a pack of cigarettes?" she writes. "With no supply there is no demand. Do it, sir, and you would be the hero of heroes. Let's traffic with love. You know how."

The post has sparked debate in Mexico and beyond the nation's borders.

Singer Ricky Martin re-tweeted it Tuesday. "Bravo Kate," he wrote.

CNN's Maria Elisa Callejas contributed to this report.

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