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    Home / News / World News / Remembering Pablo Escobar, the Narcos King, on his death-anniversary
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    Remembering Pablo Escobar, the Narcos King, on his death-anniversary

    Remembering Pablo Escobar, the Narcos King, on his death-anniversary

    By Sneha Bengani
    Dec 02, 2017
    06:29 pm

    What's the story

    Colombia's most feared, iconic and devastating drug lord, Pablo Escobar died today 24 years ago. He was 44.

    The third of seven children born to a peasant farmer and a schoolteacher on December 1, 1949, Pablo's undiluted ambition and ruthlessness first put drug cartels and Colombia on the world map.

    On his 24th death anniversary, we look at the King of Cocaine's extraordinary life.

    Early years

    Pablo Escobar became a millionaire at 22

    Pablo took to petty street crimes early in life. He started by selling fake diplomas and report-cards, smuggling stereo sets, marijuana, and stealing tombstones and cars.

    Kidnapping and nondescript murders made him a millionaire at 22. His first arrest followed soon after, at 25.

    Escobar rose to fame during the "Marlboro Wars," during which he played a key role in controlling Colombia's smuggled-cigarette market.

    Beginning

    Escobar founded the Medellin cartel in the mid 1970s

    Fabio Restrepo, a known Medellin drug kingpin, was murdered in 1975 allegedly on Escobar's orders. In no time, Pablo took over Restrepo's operations and founded a criminal group that would later become the infamous Medellin cartel.

    Escobar expanded the organization at a scale the world had never known, purchasing large quantities of coca paste in Bolivia and Peru, processing and selling it in America.

    Rise

    He smuggled 15 tons of cocaine daily in the 1980s

    By 1980s, Escobar was behind 80% of the cocaine that was smuggled into the US.

    At the peak of his career, he illegally transported about 15 tons of cocaine daily, earning a profit of $420 million a week.

    Credited for revolutionizing the business of drug supply, Escobar smuggled unbridled amounts of cocaine whichever way he could, through planes tires, helicopters and even submarines.

    Crime

    Escobar either bribed or killed to get his work done

    Following his mantra of 'plata o plomo' (silver or lead), Escobar either bribed or killed his way to the top.

    He was responsible for the deaths of about 4,000 people, including three Colombian presidential candidates, an attorney general, an estimated 200 judges and 1,000 police personnel.

    In 1989, he bombed a Colombian plane and Bogota's DAS building, killing 159 people and injuring 1,000 others.

    Wealth

    He once burnt $2 million to keep his daughter warm

    Thanks to his insanely successful cocaine empire, Escobar had more money than he could count or manage.

    He was included in Forbes list of world's richest for seven consecutive years. At his prime, his wealth was estimated at $30bn.

    He spent $2,500 a month on rubber bands used just to stack his cash and once famously burnt about $2mn to keep his daughter warm.

    Do you know?

    Escobar had so much money that rats would eat it

    Escobar purchased a Learjet just to transport his cash. However, despite all the efforts, every year about 10% of his wealth, or $2.1 billion, would either get eaten by rats in warehouses and fields (where the money was usually stored) or would get lost.

    Politics

    Escobar's worst fear was being extradited to the US

    Pablo Escobar's biggest fear was extradition to the United States. He once said that he'd "rather have a grave in Colombia than a jail cell in the US".

    Trying to bend extradition laws, he was briefly elected as an alternate member of Colombia's Congress. He even offered to pay the country's estimated debt of $10 billion in exchange for an amnesty for drug barons.

    Details

    He made his own luxurious prison, La Catedral

    In 1991, Escobar agreed to surrender but on an unusual condition that he be detained in his own prison, guarded by his men.

    The Colombian government agreed and hence luxury prison La Catedral was built with facilities such as a nightclub, waterfall, soccer field, casino and a spa.

    However, Escobar escaped in 1992 when officials decided to move him to a standard jail.

    Information

    Escobar was Robin Hood for poor Colombians

    Despite his blood-soaked business dealings, Escobar was hailed as the modern-day Robin Hood among poor Colombians. All his life, he generously donated for community housing and food programs. He also funded the construction of several schools, churches, hospitals, and football stadiums.

    Death

    Was Escobar really shot dead by Colombian police?

    Several theories float around Escobar's death.

    It's popularly believed that he was gunned down by the Colombian police on December 2, 1993, on the rooftop of a hideout in Medellin.

    However, many, including his son, believe that Escobar killed himself knowing that he'd be extradited if caught.

    About 25,000 people, mostly poor Colombians who revered him for his philanthropy, attended Escobar's burial in Medellin.

    Truth or fiction?

    He's arguably the most well-documented drug lord of all time

    Escobar's eventful life has been the inspiration of innumerable films, books and TV shows, most recently Neflix's 2015 originals, Narcos.

    The blockbuster series follows Escobar's life through two American drug enforcement agents who assisted in his manhunt.

    Though critically acclaimed, the web series was criticized for distorting facts. In 2016, Escobar's brother, Roberto, threatened to sue Netflix for $1 billion over alleged misrepresentation.

    Interesting facts

    Pablo Escobar dreamed of becoming the President of Colombia

    Escobar always wanted to be the President of Colombia.

    His biggest single cocaine shipment to the United States weighed 51,000 pounds. Depending on the amount of cocaine a pilot smuggled, they could earn up to $500,000 a day.

    Escobar had a zoo of his own with about 200 animals, including elephants, ostriches, zebras, hippos and giraffes, most were smuggled on his drug planes.

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