The once-secretive Mexican drug lord Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán has launched a public relations blitz, calling on his lawyers and even his common-law wife to keep his name in the news.
Emma Coronel, mother of Guzmán's twin 4-year-old daughters, has given unprecedented media interviews, issuing dire warnings about his health and pressuring the government to improve the conditions he endures his third time behind bars.
His lawyers have gathered the media at Mexico's supreme court and outside the White House in Washington. On Friday, one of Guzmán's lawyers called a news conference outside the maximum-security Altiplano prison where he's being held, and which he escaped from through a mile-long tunnel in July.
Wearing an "Extradition Never!!!" sweat shirt emblazoned with a photo of his client, attorney José Luis González Meza said he planned to begin a hunger strike - water and juice allowed. He called on Mexicans to join him.
Analysts say the publicity is all part of a carefully planned media strategy.
At the very least, Guzmán hopes to negotiate the terms of his imprisonment in the United States should moves to extradite him succeed.
Another Guzmán attorney, José Refugio Rodríguez, says that the drug lord wants to be sent to the U.S quickly and negotiate a guilty plea in exchange for a "reasonable" sentence in a medium-security prison in the United States.
Samuel Logan of the business and security consulting firm Southern Pulse said he doesn't believe the effort will work.
"El Chapo's folks are grasping at straws," he said. "I doubt the U.S. will negotiate on any level."
The PR campaign has featured Guzmán's former beauty queen common-law wife giving her first-ever public interview in February.
Conservatively dressed and poised throughout her conversation with Telemundo, Coronel painted an image of "El Chapo" as a loving family man. She was careful to suggest his innocence, or at least not confirm his guilt.
"I'm not certain that he traffics drugs," she said.
Guzmán's attorneys have publicly expressed concern for his health and criticized his treatment while jailed.
"How long is his body going to tolerate this state of stress that he's submitted to?" Rodríguez said last month after a 30-minute visit at Altiplano prison with Guzman. "If this doesn't stop, he is going to get sick and his life is at great risk."
Outside the prison Friday, Bernarda Guzmán Loera, who said she was one of the drug lord's sisters, said his family was "very worried."
The drug lord's lawyers have filed several requests for injunctions in Mexican courts to stop his extradition. Rodríguez said Wednesday they won't drop those efforts until they get an agreement with U.S. prosecutors, an unrealistic scenario.
Things were a lot different for Guzman the last time he was in prison, after being captured the second time in 2014. Mexico's then-attorney general said the drug chieftain would only be extradited to the U.S. "in 300 or 400 years" after serving his Mexican sentence.
In a recent court filing shared by his lawyers, Guzmán described a relatively permissive environment with plenty of access by outside visitors and some freedom to move around.
"Half a year ago I was in this place and had a daily visit of an hour and a half with my defense attorney," Guzmán said in the filing, plus "a four-hour family visit every nine days and a four-hour intimate (conjugal) visit every nine days, a daily hour on the patio to go out and walk in the sun."
Raíl Benitez, a security specialist who teaches political science at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, said during that earlier imprisonment authorities "did not violate his human rights, quite the opposite. They practically let him open an office in the prison to run his businesses."
But then "El Chapo" pulled off a brazen escape, coolly stepping into a hole in the floor of his prison cell shower and whizzing to freedom on a motorcycle modified to run on tracks laid the length of the tunnel.
President Enrique Peña Nieto was embarrassed by the escape in July, Guzmán's second from a maximum security prison. The first escape was in January 2001 from a prison in Jalisco state. After Guzmán was recaptured in January of this year, Peña Nieto said the drug lord would be extradited.
Now, Guzman's visits with his lawyer and his wife are shorter and chaperoned. Guzman complains that frequent bed checks, barking dogs and regular prison racket keep him from sleeping and drive his blood pressure to dangerous levels.
National Security Commissioner Renato Sales has denied Guzmán's claims that authorities are violating his rights.
"Shouldn't someone who twice escaped from maximum security prisons be subject to special security measures? The common sense answer is 'yes,'" Sales said.
Now, Logan said, "the politics are against him."
"Any backroom deals that he may have cut before are rendered null now that he escaped and embarrassed" Peña Nieto, he added. "He's a king in his own fiefdom in the interior of Sinaloa (state), but nationwide I think people are just tired of having him around."