An inmate brought from Mexico to Brooklyn to face U.S. cartel-related charges has died after being found unresponsive in his cell at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Sunset Park. Carlos Alberto Guerrero Mercado, 47, was discovered on April 18 and was kept on life support at NYU Langone Hospital – Brooklyn until he died there on April 28.
Guerrero Mercado was one of 37 Mexican nationals flown into U.S. custody in January in a mass transfer that federal officials described as targeting narcoterrorism and cartel networks, according to the DOJ. Several of the transferred suspects were brought to Brooklyn to face a 2024 indictment alleging the production of massive quantities of fentanyl from precursor chemicals sourced in China.
Details of Guerrero Mercado’s collapse surfaced in reporting this week: a cellmate found him hanging on April 18, correction officers attempted CPR and reportedly administered two doses of naloxone before he was taken to the hospital, as reported by the New York Daily News. He remained on life support at NYU Langone until April 28, when federal prosecutors said he died after suffering a cardiac event. An autopsy left the official cause of death undetermined pending further investigation, and officials said the matter is under review.
Brooklyn Jail Back Under Scrutiny
The Metropolitan Detention Center in Sunset Park, New York City’s only active federal jail, routinely holds high-profile defendants. A Bureau of Prisons fact sheet highlights recent staffing increases and facility repairs, even as advocates and legal observers continue to push for clearer reporting on in-custody deaths at MDC Brooklyn. For a facility that already draws scrutiny, another death only sharpens those demands.
Family and Lawyers Demand Answers
Guerrero Mercado’s attorney, Kannan Sundaram, said his client had no criminal record and leaves behind a wife, a six-year-old son and his parents, according to the New York Daily News. Civil-rights advocates quoted in the coverage warned that MDC’s secrecy and limited public reporting on deaths in custody create ongoing concerns for families and defense lawyers who are often left piecing together what happened from the outside…