Jump to content

Pablo Escobar

Page semi-protected
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pablo Escobar
Escobar in a 1976 mugshot
Born
Pablo Emilio Escobar Gaviria

(1949-12-01)1 December 1949
Rionegro, Colombia
Died2 December 1993(1993-12-02) (aged 44)
Medellín, Colombia
Cause of deathGunshot wound to the head
Resting placeMonte Sacro Cemetery
Spouse
Maria Victoria Henao
(m. 1976)
Children
Parent(s)Abel de Jesús Escobar Echeverri[1][2]
Hermilda de los Dolores Gaviria Berrío[3][4]
RelativesJosé Obdulio Gaviria
Gustavo Gaviria
Criminal chargeDrug trafficking, money laundering, murder, terrorism, bribery, smuggling, extortion, political corruption.
Other names
  • El Patrón (The Boss)
  • Don Pablo (Sir Pablo)
  • El Padrino (The Godfather)
  • El Diablo (The Devil)
  • Paisa Robin Hood
  • El Doctor (The Doctor)
OrganizationMedellín cartel
Conviction(s)Illegal drug trade, assassinations, bombing, bribery, racketeering, murder
Criminal penaltyFive years' imprisonment
Signature

Pablo Emilio Escobar Gaviria (/ˈɛskəbɑːr/; Spanish: [ˈpaβlo eskoˈβaɾ]; 1 December 1949 – 2 December 1993) was a Colombian drug lord, narcoterrorist, and politician who was the founder and sole leader of the Medellín Cartel.[5][6] Dubbed "the king of cocaine", Escobar is considered the wealthiest criminal in history, having amassed an estimated net worth of US$30 billion by the time of his death—equivalent to $70 billion as of 2022—while his drug cartel monopolized the cocaine trade into the United States in the 1980s and early 1990s.[7][8]

Born in Rionegro into a peasant family and raised in Medellín, Escobar studied briefly at Universidad Autónoma Latinoamericana of Medellín but left without graduating; he instead began engaging in criminal activity, selling illegal cigarettes and fake lottery tickets, as well as participating in motor vehicle theft. In the early 1970s, he began to work for various smugglers.

In 1976, forming alliances with Gonzalo Rodríguez Gacha, Carlos Lehder, and Jorge Luis Ochoa and his clan, Escobar founded the Medellín Cartel, which distributed powder cocaine. He also established the first smuggling routes from Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador through Colombia and into the United States. Escobar's infiltration into the U.S. created exponential demand for cocaine, and by the 1980s, it was estimated Escobar led monthly shipments of 70 to 80 tons of cocaine into the country from Colombia, controlling more than 80% of the world's production of the drug and 60% of the illicit market in the United States.[9] As a result, Escobar amassed an immense fortune, which amounted to around eight billion dollars between assets and cash; according to Forbes, for seven consecutive years, he was one of the richest people in the world.[7][10][11][12][13][excessive citations]

In the 1982 Colombian parliamentary election, to excuse his immeasurable capital, Escobar was elected as an alternate member of the Chamber of Representatives as part of the Liberal Party. Through this, he was responsible for community projects such as the construction of houses and football fields, which gained him popularity among the locals of the towns that he frequented; however, Escobar's political ambitions were thwarted by the Colombian and U.S. governments, constantly battled rival cartels domestically and abroad, leading to massacres and the murders of police officers, judges, locals, and prominent politicians.[14] who routinely pushed for his arrest, with Escobar widely believed to have orchestrated the Avianca Flight 203 and DAS Building bombings in retaliation.

In 1989, after several attempts at negotiation, multiple kidnappings, and selective assassinations of judges and public officials, the Medellín Cartel with Escobar at its helm declared total war against the government.[15][16] Escobar organized and financed an extensive army of hitmen, who assassinated key figures for the Colombian institutionality, such as the liberal leader Luis Carlos Galán, and perpetrated indiscriminate terrorist acts, such as the use of car bombs in Colombia's main cities. This campaign of narcoterrorism destabilized the country and made Escobar the most wanted criminal in the world at the beginning of the nineties.[17][18] Escobar was responsible for the murder of 657 police officers between 1989 and 1993,[19][20][21] and fierce clashes against the Cali Cartel,[22][23] the Magdalena Medio Antioquia paramilitary groups, and Los Pepes.

In 1991, after the consummation of the National Constituent Assembly, which gave Colombia a new constitution and the prohibition of the extradition of nationals, Escobar surrendered to authorities and was sentenced to five years' imprisonment on multiple charges; however, he struck a deal of no extradition with Colombian President César Gaviria, along with the ability to be housed in his self-built prison, La Catedral. In 1992, when authorities attempted to move Escobar to a more standard holding facility after confirming that he had continued to commit crimes while imprisoned, Escobar escaped and went into hiding, leading to a nationwide manhunt.[24] As a result, the Medellín Cartel crumbled, and in 1993, Escobar was killed in his hometown by Colombian National Police, a day after his 44th birthday.[25]

Escobar's legacy remains controversial; while many denounce the heinous nature of his crimes, he was seen as a "Robin Hood-like" figure for many in Colombia, as he provided many amenities to the poor. His killing was mourned and his funeral attended by over 25,000 people.[26] Additionally, his private estate, Hacienda Nápoles, has been transformed into a theme park.[27] His life has also served as inspiration for or has been dramatized widely in film, television, and in music.

Early life

The city of Medellín, where Escobar grew up and began his criminal career

Pablo Emilio Escobar Gaviria was born on 1 December 1949 in the small village of El Tablazo near Rionegro, Antioquia Department. He belonged to the Paisa ethnic subgroup. His family was of Spanish origin, specifically from the Basque Country, and also had Italian roots.[28] He was the second of seven children and grew up in poverty.[29][30][31][32] His father was a small farmer and his mother was a teacher, and his siblings in order of birth were Roberto de Jesus 'El Osito',[33] Gloria Inés,[34] Argemiro,[35] Alba Marina,[36] Luz María[37] and Luis Fernando (the latter born in 1958 and murdered at the age of 19 in 1977).[38]

Escobar's maternal grandfather, Roberto Gaviria Cobaleda, had already preceded him in illegal activities, as he was a renowned whiskey smuggler at a time when it was illegal (early 20th century).[39][40] Gaviria Cobaleda was also the grandfather of the Colombian lawyer and politician José Obdulio Gaviria.[41]

"Well, my family did not have significant financial resources and we lived through difficulties like those experienced by the majority of Colombian people, so we are not oblivious to these problems, we know them deeply and we understand them."

— Pablo Escobar[42]

However, his ancestors and immediate family members stood out as politicians, businessmen, ranchers and figures of the Antioquian elite,[43] therefore, his widely publicized "popular origins" would not correspond to reality. Among his extensive family members is Isabel Gaviria Duque, First Lady of the Nation, wife of Carlos E. Restrepo, who was President of Colombia between 1910 and 1914. Pablo Escobar's godfather was the renowned Colombian diplomat and intellectual Joaquín Vallejo Arbeláez. His death is kept in the parish of Rionegro, which reads:

In the parish of San Nicolás de Rionegro, on December 4, 1949, Father Juan M. Gómez baptized a child who was born on the first day of the present, whom he named PABLO EMILIO, legitimate son of Abel de Jesús Escobar and Hermilda Gaviria, residents of this parish. Paternal grandparents: Pablo Emilio Escobar and Sara María Echeverri. Maternal grandparents: Roberto Gaviria and Inés Berrío. Godparents: Joaquín Vallejo and Nelly Mejía de Vallejo, who were advised of their spiritual relationship and obligations. I attest. Agustín Gómez. Priest. MARGINAL NOTE OF CONFIRMATION. Confirmed in the Minor Basilica by His Excellency Mr. Alfonso Uribe Jaramillo, on October 21, 1952. Godfather: Gustavo Gaviria. I attest. Juan M. Gómez, Priest. MARGINAL NOTE OF MARRIAGE. He was married in Palmira, Valle, parish of La Stma. Trinidad, on March 29, 1976. Witnesses: Alfonso Hurtado and Dolores de Vallejo. He married Victoria E. Henao. I attest to this. Monsignor Samuel Álvarez Botero.

Childhood and youth

According to his mother, Escobar began to show insight and cunning as early as elementary school; and at the beginning of high school, another of his qualities became evident: his leadership over his classmates. Escobar and his cousin Gustavo Gaviria Rivero did small "businesses" at the Lucrecio Jaramillo Vélez high school, where they both studied. They held raffles, exchanged comics, sold exams and lent money at low interest. In this way, Pablo Escobar began to develop his "ability" for business and commerce.

Escobar left high school in 1966 just before his 17th birthday, before returning two years later with his cousin Gustavo Gaviria. At this time, the hard life on the streets of Medellín had polished them into gangster bullies in the eyes of teachers. The two dropped out of school after more than a year, but Escobar did not give up. Having forged a high school diploma, he was admitted to study at the Faculty of Economics of the Latin American Autonomous University of Medellin, where several of his Gaviria cousins were studying, including José Obdulio, with the goal of becoming a criminal lawyer, a politician, and eventually the president but had to give up because of lack of money. Escobar preferred to dedicate himself to his personal "businesses." An interesting fact, he always felt self-conscious about his short stature (1.65 m) and this made him wear special shoes with heels to make himself look taller.[44][45][46][47]

Criminal career

Early

Escobar started his criminal career with his gang by with small scams, thefts, and after stealing tombstones, sandblasting their inscriptions, and reselling them. After dropping out of college, Escobar began to join gangs to steal cars.[48] Escobar soon became involved in violent crime, employing criminals to kidnap people who owed him money and demand ransoms, sometimes tearing up ransom notes even when Escobar had received the ransom. It is speculated that businessman Diego Echavarria Misas was kidnapped and eventually killed in the summer of 1971 with the participation of Escobar, who supposedly received a $50,000 ransom from the Echavarria family.[49][50] Escobar would repeat the same process with drug lord Fabio Restrepo, kidnapping and murdering him in 1975.[51][52]

After Escobar would later begin to work for Alfredo Gómez López, 'Don Capone', the king of smuggling in Colombia.[53] Escobar soon entered the drug trade by smuggling marijuana to the United States under the patronage of Griselda Blanco. After the end of the marijuana boom, Escobar began working as an intermediary who bought cocaine paste in Colombia, Bolivia and Peru, to later resell it to his partners the Ochoa brothers, traffickers in charge of taking it to the United States.

Medellín Cartel

International drug routes
The cocaine sent by the Medellín Cartel to the United States was packaged in blocks and entered hidden among parts of machinery, cars, submarines, boats and even in the tires of airplanes coming from Colombia. Up to 15 tons of this drug entered the northern country every day.[54]

Escobar had been involved in organized crime for a decade when the cocaine trade began to spread in Colombia in the mid-1970s. Escobar's meteoric rise caught the attention of the Colombian Security Service (DAS), who arrested him in May 1976 on his return from drug trafficking in Ecuador. DAS agents found 39 kg of cocaine in the spare tire of Escobar's car. Escobar managed to change the first judge in the lawsuit and the process expired, apparently by bribed the second judge, so he was released along with other prisoners. Despite this, the case was reopened by Judge Mariela Espinosa, who also dropped the investigation due to threats against her life.[55] The following year, the agents who arrested Escobar were assassinated. Escobar continued to bribe and intimidate Colombian law enforcement agencies in the same fashion. His carrot-and-stick strategy of bribing public officials and political candidates in Colombia, in addition to sending hitmen to murder the ones who rejected his bribes, came to be known as "silver or lead", meaning "money or death".[56][46][57] The Medellín Cartel and the Cali Cartel both managed to bribe Colombian politicians, and campaigned for both the Conservative and Liberal parties. Although the difference between the two cartels was that the Medellín Cartel used its "money or death" law through a huge army of hitmen, the Cali Cartel preferred to use bribes by having politicians, journalists, police officers, army officers, judges, etc. on its payroll.[58][59]

Hence, Escobar and many other Colombian drug lords were pulling strings in every level of the Colombian government because many of the political candidates whom they backed financially were eventually elected.[58] Although the Medellín Cartel was only established in the early 1970s, it expanded after Escobar met several drug lords on a farm in April 1978, and by the end of 1978 they had transported some 19,000 kilograms of cocaine to the United States.[60]

Rise to prominence

Powder cocaine was manufactured, packaged, and sold by Pablo Escobar and his associates, and eventually distributed to the U.S. drug market.

Soon, the demand for cocaine greatly increased in the United States, which led to Escobar organizing more smuggling shipments, routes, and distribution networks in South Florida, California, Puerto Rico, and other parts of the country. He and cartel co-founder Carlos Lehder worked together to develop a new trans-shipment point in the Bahamas, an island called Norman's Cay about 350 km (220 mi) southeast of the Florida coast. Escobar and Robert Vesco purchased most of the land on the island, which included a 1-kilometre (3,300 ft) airstrip, a harbor, a hotel, houses, boats, and aircraft, and they built a refrigerated warehouse to store the cocaine. According to his brother, Escobar did not purchase Norman's Cay; it was instead a sole venture of Lehder's. From 1978 to 1982, this was used as a central smuggling route for the Medellín Cartel. With the enormous profits generated by this route, Escobar was soon able to purchase 20 square kilometres (7.7 sq mi) of land in Antioquia for several million dollars, on which he built the Hacienda Nápoles.

The luxury house he created contained a zoo, with more than two hundred species of exotic animals for the region, such as hippos, giraffes, elephants, zebras and ostriches, all introduced into the country as a result of bribes to the government entity INDERENA and the customs authorities; a lake, a sculpture garden; a private bullring; and other amenities for his family and the cartel. Escobar made a show of this by producing a propaganda report about his Hacienda.[61]

Escobar was also among the world's billionaires due to his immense fortune invested in buildings, homes, automobiles and estates. listed as the seventh richest man in the world, according to Forbes, something his son would deny years later.[62][63]

Escobar's political career

Tranquilandia was the main cocaine production center of the Medellín Cartel, located in the department of Caquetá. It had 19 processing laboratories, abundant fresh water (from the Yarí River), an independent electrical system, dormitories and a landing strip. The complex was destroyed in 1984 by the National Police and the DEA, seizing about 14 tons of drugs, valued at 1.2 billion dollars.[64]

At the height of his power, Escobar was involved in philanthropy in Colombia and paid handsomely for the staff of his cocaine lab. Escobar spent millions developing some of Medellín's poorest neighborhoods. He built housing complexes, parks, football stadiums, hospitals, schools, and churches.[65][66] His most famous charity work was the 'Medellín without slums' neighbourhood, aimed at people living in slums at the Medellín municipal dump.[67][68] Shortly before the presidential and regional elections of 1982 began, Escobar realized that he had to create a "cover" to protect his lucrative drug trade. He began to cultivate an image of a respectable man, making contacts with politicians, financiers, lawyers, etc. Considered until then a 'Robin Hood paisa' due to his help to the poor of Medellín, Escobar would enter politics with the help of Jairo Ortega Ramírez as a congressman representing Antioquia through the Liberal Renewal movement,[69][70] although his godfather in politics was the liberal chieftain from Tolima Department Alberto Santofimio Botero. This triumvirate initially supported the candidacy of Luis Carlos Galán, a dissident of the Liberal Party for his New Liberalism movement. While campaigning politically in Medellín, Galán learned through his assistant Iván Marulanda that people whose fortunes were of dubious origin had joined the Liberal Renovation movement. In Medellín's Berrío Park, Galán, without mentioning Escobar's name, publicly expelled him, rejecting the support of Escobar and others similar to him involved in shady business dealings.[71][72]

Despite the opposition and warnings of his partners, in 1982, he successfully entered the Colombian Congress. Although only an alternate, he was automatically granted parliamentary immunity and the right to a diplomatic passport under Colombian law. At the same time, Escobar was gradually becoming a public figure, and because of his charitable work, he was known as "Robin Hood Paisa". He alleged once in an interview that his fortune came from a bicycle rental company he founded when he was 16 years old.[73]

After of his election, Escobar was invited in 1982 to the inauguration of Felipe González, the third president of democratic Spain, by the Spanish businessman Enrique Sarasola, who had important business dealings in Medellín.[74][75][76][77][78][79][excessive citations]

The Justice Minister Rodrigo Lara (center) and presidential candidate Luis Carlos Galán (left) were both assassinated by orders of Escobar.

In Congress, in 1983, the new Minister of Justice, Rodrigo Lara-Bonilla, had become Escobar's opponent, accusing Escobar of criminal activity from the first day of Congress. Lara, who had since denounced the infiltration of illicit money into Colombian politics and soccer teams,[80][81] accused him not only of being a drug trafficker but also of being the leader of the paramilitary group Death to Kidnappers (MAS), created in 1981 to violently stop the onslaught of the M-19 guerrilla movement that had kidnapped Martha Nieves Ochoa, sister of his associates, and an attempted kidnapping of his partner Carlos Lehder who managed to escape wounded in the leg.[82][83] Escobar secretly counterattacks alongside Jairo Ortega by showing a copy of a check from drug trafficker Evaristo Porras to Lara's Senate campaign,[84][85][86] in addition to challenging the minister to show evidence against him under penalty of being sued for slander and defamation. Guillermo Cano, editor and owner of the newspaper El Espectador, seeing Escobar, sensed that he knew him from somewhere, so accompanied by María Jimena Duzán and another reporter, they went to the disorganized archive of the newspaper and found the headline in which it was reported that Escobar together his cousin Gustavo Gaviria had been arrested for possessing coca paste.[87]

Lara's car after his murder and the submachine gun with which he was killed.

Escobar's arrest in 1976 was investigated by Lara-Bonilla's subordinates, this confirmed in a Brian Ross's September 5, 1983 report, on the U.S. television network NBC.[88] A few months later, Escobar was publicly expelled from Congress and his visa to the United States was cancelled, while Judge Gustavo Zuluaga Serna issued an arrest warrant against Escobar for the murder of the two DAS agents who had captured him in 1976. At the same time, and with Lara's approval, the police, headed by Colonel Jaime Ramírez, together with the DEA discovered and dismantled Tranquilandia, a complex of several cocaine processing laboratories owned by Rodríguez Gacha. Although Escobar fought back, he announced his retirement from politics in January 1984.[89][90] Three months later, Lara-Bonilla, whose honor had previously been called into question and then vindicated, was murdered.[91][92][93]

War against drugs and narcoterrorism

Colombia will hand over criminals requested by the Crime Commission in other countries; so that they are punished in an exemplary manner, in this universal operation against an attack that is also universal.

President Belisario Betancur, who had previously opposed the extradition of Colombians, decided to authorize it, triggering a series of police operations to capture members of the Medellín Cartel. The main leaders of the Cartel had to take refuge in Panama and tried, in May 1984, to talk with former President Alfonso López Michelsen, who was acting as an electoral observer in the elections in Panama, at the Hilton Hotel in Panama City in a last attempt to approach the government, denying their authorship of the murder of the minister but offering to surrender on condition of not extraditing them. Their failure was due to the fact that the talks had been leaked to the press. Months later, they returned clandestinely to Colombia.[96][97][98]

In November 1984, Los Extraditables detonated a car bomb in front of the US embassy in Bogotá, killing one person.[99] A year after the murder of Lara Bonilla, despite the government's announcements to combat them, the drug traffickers of the Medellín Cartel, now renamed Los Extraditables, remained unpunished, expanding their criminal apparatus across large areas of the country and opening new cocaine trafficking routes through Nicaragua and Cuba. All of this in collusion with some sectors of the public forces, bought off with money and terror. In the fall of 1985, the wanted Escobar requested the Colombian government to allow his conditional surrender without extradition to the United States. The proposal was initially rejected, The Los Extraditable Organization was subsequently accused of participating in an effort to prevent the Colombian Supreme Court from studying the constitutionality of Colombia's extradition treaty with the United States.[100][101]

The Colombian judiciary had been a target of Escobar throughout the mid-1980s. While bribing and murdering several judges; beginning in June 1985, Los Extraditables ordered the death of Judge Tulio Manuel Castro Gil, in charge of investigating the Lara Bonilla murder.[102][103][104][105][89][excessive citations] According to reports, Escobar, who was at war with the guerrillas after the MAS episode, approached the M-19 through negotiations with Iván Marino Ospina. According to some reports, it is believed that he was aware of the Palace of Justice siege due to the threats made by Los Extraditables to the magistrates of the courts and because he offered economic support for the operation, which was not accepted by the former M-19 militants, since the operation, according to them, had political objectives.[106] The existence of copies of the files and the extradition requests in the foreign ministry, American courts and the American embassy disproves that the burning of files was the reason for the guerrilla operation.[107] The operation was authorized by Álvaro Fayad and took place between November 6 and 7, 1985, resulting in 94 dead and the disappearance of 11 people during the retaking of the Palace by the Public Force.[108]

The Cartel's campaign of assassinations against its enemies in the Government and those who supported the extradition treaty, made effective in January 1985 with the sending of the first captured to the United States[109] by the newly appointed Minister of Justice Enrique Parejo González, replacing the murdered Lara, and all those who denounced their business and mafia networks. The Extraditables assassinated, in February 1986, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, the pilot and witness before the American justice system Barry Seal;[110][111][112] in July, the magistrate Hernando Baquero Borda, rapporteur of the Extradition Treaty in 1980,[113][114][115] and the journalist of El Espectador Roberto Camacho Prada;[116] and on August 18, already with the new president of Colombia Virgilio Barco Vargas, the captain of the anti-narcotics police Luis Alfredo Macana.[117][118]

In September 1986, Los Extraditables ordered the murder of Diario Occidente journalist Raúl Echavarría Barrientos.[119][120][121][98] In September 1986, motorized hitmen killed Judge Zuluaga Serna.[89][122][123]

The newspaper El Espectador, one of the oldest in America, maintained a severe attitude against drug trafficking and was the one who revealed details of Escobar's criminal life after his arrival at the House of Representatives in 1982. Its director, Guillermo Cano, was shot by orders of the boss in 1986. Its facilities (in the image) were half-destroyed by a car bomb in September 1989, also by orders of Escobar.

In October 1986, anti-narcotics police colonel Jaime Ramírez Gómez was killed after returning to Bogotá from a weekend trip with his family.[124][125][126] On December 17, 1986, Guillermo Cano, editor of El Espectador newspaper, was killed.[127][128][129][130] In January 1987, Escobar's hitmen attacked Parejo González, former Minister of Justice in Budapest and at the time Colombian ambassador to Hungary.[131][132][133][134][135][136][137][excessive citations]

In late 1986, Colombia's Supreme Court declared the previous extradition treaty illegal due to being signed by a presidential delegation, not the president. Escobar's victory over the judiciary was short-lived.[138][139] It is believed that Escobar was the one who betrayed Lehder, causing his capture on February 4, 1987. However, unexpectedly, Lehder was extradited to the United States.Escobar and the rest of the leadership, aware of the danger that extradition represented for their interests and determined to fight it, reinforced their military and economic apparatus and set about collecting considerable resources from all drug traffickers, even from those who were not part of their group, in order to finance the foreseeable escalation of violence.[140][141][142][143]

War between drug cartels

Although both cartels maintained a cordial relationship, the origin of the war between the Medellin and Cali cartels has varied origins. One version suggests disagreement with the violent methods used by Escobar. Added to this, the Cali Cartel opposed a "war quota" against the government by refusing to pay for it. Another version suggests the Cali Cartel's zeal to take control of the drug market in Los Angeles and Miami since it currently monopolized drug trafficking in New York City, according to a DEA analysis.[144] another version suggests that the Cali Cartel informed on Jorge Luis Ochoa, Escobar's partner, while Ochoa was in Buga, Valle del Cauca. This has been denied since Ochoa and Gilberto Rodríguez Orejuela had shared a cell in Spain where they were to be extradited to the United States, but both were repatriated to Colombia where they served meager prison sentences.[145][146][147][148][149][excessive citations] According to Jhon Jairo Velásquez 'Popeye', a hitman for the Medellín Cartel, the dispute between the two sides began due to disputes between employees of Pablo Escobar and Hélmer Herrera:

The war began with a love affair between "Piña" and Jorge Elí "El Negro" Pabón. "El Negro" Pabón was a man very loyal to Pablo Emilio Escobar Gaviria and Alejo Piña was a man of "Pacho" Herrera, both had been friends in a New York prison, but when El Negro got out of prison, he found out that Piña was living with his former wife, El Negro spoke with the boss [Escobar] and they agreed that Piña had to be killed; As the Medellín Cartel killed Hugo Hernán Valencia, a man who had had a problem with Gilberto Rodríguez, we asked the Rodríguez family to return the favor, to let us kill Piña or for them to take care of him themselves, with their people. We did not know about the economic and military power of "Pacho" Herrera. The Rodríguez family, instead of explaining this to their boss, went directly to tell 'Pacho' Herrera that the Medellín Cartel wanted to kill Piña, and that's when war broke out.

— Jhon Jairo Velásquez 'Popeye'[150]

Hugo Hernán Valencia and Pablo Correa Arroyave were the main money launderers for the Cartel. Both had a feud with the heads of the Cali Cartel and the latter had asked Escobar to do them a favor by killing them. But when the Cali Cartel refused to kill Piña, Escobar allowed Pabón to kill Piña. In retaliation, on January 13, 1988, 'Pacho' Herrera ordered his men to place a car bomb at the Monaco tower in the El Poblado sector of Medellín, where Escobar's family resided.[151][152] The attack left a large crater and killed three people. Among the wounded was Manuela Escobar, Escobar's daughter, who had hearing damage in one of her ears. None of the residents were killed.[153][154][155][156][157][158][excessive citations] In retaliation, hitmen from the Medellin Cartel attacked the businesses and properties of the Cali Cartel. On February 18, 1988, a branch of La Rebaja Pharmacies in Medellin,[159][160][161] followed by nearly 40 dynamite attacks against the drugstores, and 10 more against the Colombian Radio Group, both belonging to the Rodríguez Orejuela family.[162][22][163][164] 1988 marked the beginning of espionage and counterespionage offensives. First, Escobar set up an intelligence operation against the Cali Cartel. The Rodríguez Orejuela family, in turn, hired five retired military officers to form an espionage service against Escobar. Escobar discovered them and kidnapped them. The Cali Cartel then made a peace proposal, to which Escobar set two conditions: Compensation of 5 million dollars for the attack on the Monaco building, and the surrender of Pacho Herrera, Escobar's staunch enemy. Gilberto Rodríguez refused to surrender and the five ex-military men were found dead a few days later with a sign that read "Members of the Cali Cartel executed for attempting to attack people from Medellín."[165]

In December 1988, Escobar's hitmen attempt to kidnap Pacho Herrera in Cali, the operation fails and Herrera becomes Escobar's main target.[23]

1989 offensive and failed negotiations

Minister of Justice Enrique Low Murtra signed the extradition orders for Escobar and his cartel associates.[166] A few days later, the politician and candidate for mayor of Medellín, Juan Gómez Martínez,[167][168] was saved from an attempted kidnapping claimed by Los Extraditables, while Jorge Luis Ochoa was released with impunity under the right of habeas corpus a month later.

Andrés Pastrana, in 1988 candidate for mayor of Bogotá kidnapped by orders from Escobar, and later president of Colombia (1998–2002).

On January 16, 1988, Escobar's hitmen kidnapped Andrés Pastrana (candidate for mayor of Bogotá and later President of Colombia) and held him hidden for several days on a farm near Rionegro.[169][170][171][172][173][excessive citations] On January 25, 1988, cartel hitmen kidnapped Carlos Mauro Hoyos (Attorney General of the Nation), as he was heading to the airport in Rionegro (Antioquia). Although the plan was to keep both Hoyos and Pastrana captive in the same place, the money lavishness of Jorge Restrepo, the front man in charge of Pastrana who was held captive (barely a week) caught the attention of the authorities and the police managed to free Pastrana. But in retaliation, alias 'Popeye' shot and killed Carlos Mauro Hoyos (48), who had been kidnapped for 10 hours.[174][175][176] In March 1988, several hundred police officers descended on the El Bizcocho estate (owned by Escobar), but he was warned at the last minute by the corrupt Lieutenant Colonel Plinio Correa of Police Intelligence B-2 and managed to escape.[177][178][179][180]

In July 1988, the Secretary General of the Presidency, Germán Montoya, had entered into talks with spokesmen for Los Extraditables. Subsequent statements by the government were interpreted by the drug lords as an invitation to dialogue, so on September 15, they responded with a letter to the Barco administration, and sent Montoya a bill for pardons and a demobilization plan. However, given the intransigence of the United States, reluctant to the possibility of dialogue with the drug lords, the talks were delayed and in the end they were presented as the personal initiative of the intermediary, disassociating the president from them.[181]

In March 1989, hitmen from Los Extraditables killed Héctor Giraldo Gálvez,[182][183] the Lara case manager replacing Castro Gil, and two months later they blew up the headquarters of the TV production company Mundo Visión.[184] On May 4, 1989, the former governor of Boyacá, Álvaro González Santana, father of Judge Martha Lucía González, was assassinated.[185][186] After the attempted assassination of the head of the DAS, General Miguel Maza Márquez on May 30, 1989, in Bogotá, using a powerful explosive charge in a letter bomb that killed 7 people.[187] On July 4, 1989, in Medellín, in an attack targeting Colonel Valdemar Franklin Quintero, the governor of Antioquia, Antonio Roldán Betancur, died along with five of his companions.[188][189][190] On July 28, 1989, Escobar's hitmen murdered Judge María Helena Díaz – Espinoza's substitute in the Escobar and Gaviria case for possession of coca paste – and her two bodyguards.[191][192][193][194]

On August 16, 1989, Escobar's hitmen killed the judge of the superior court of Cundinamarca, Carlos Ernesto Valencia,[195][196] and on August 18 in Medellin, Colonel Quintero was shot dead by dozens of bullets. Although the news of the crime that occurred in the morning hours was overshadowed, when at night during a political rally in Soacha, Escobar still held a grudge against Luis Carlos Galán for kicking him out of politics, so Galán was assassinated on 18 August 1989 at Escobar's orders; several dozen gunmen in the service of Rodríguez Gacha infiltrated the demonstration and killed the presidential candidate for the Liberal Party, Luis Carlos Galán, a staunch enemy of drug lords and supporter of allowing the extradition of drug lords to the US, who had the best chance of reaching the presidency of the nation. Also involved in this murder was the politician Alberto Santofimio Botero, who in 2006 was shown to have been the intellectual co-author of the crime.[98][197]

President Barco declared war on drug trafficking in the same way that Betancur had done five years earlier. With Decree 1830 of August 19, 1989,[198] Barco established extradition by administrative means, without taking into account the ruling of the Supreme Court of Justice; with Decree 1863[199] he authorized military judges to conduct searches where there were suspicions or indications of persons or objects related to a crime; with Decree 1856 he ordered the confiscation of all movable and immovable property of drug traffickers;[199][200][201] and with Decree 1859[199] he authorized the capture was authorized in conditions of absolute incommunication detention and for a time that exceeded constitutional norms, of persons of whom there were serious indications of having committed crimes against the existence and security of the State. In addition, the creation of the Elite Group of the police with 500 men was arranged, essentially aimed at hunting down terrorist leaders, and it was placed under the command of Colonel Hugo Martínez Poveda. In the following days, the Army and the Police carried out more than 450 raids throughout the country and arrested nearly 13,000 people accused of being linked to drug trafficking.

Avianca Flight 203 was destroyed on November 27, 1989, in mid-flight on Escobar's orders with the aim of killing César Gaviria Trujillo, who did not board the plane at the last moment; 110 people died. Gaviria would become president of Colombia in 1990 and Escobar would be decommissioned under his mandate. In the image, a Boeing 727 similar to the one destroyed.

On August 23, the Extraditables responded to the government in a letter to the public, taking on the challenge of total war. With 3,000 armed hitmen, the association of paramilitarism and the support of a significant portion of the population under its control, in addition to the financial muscle that gave it control of at least 90% of cocaine trafficking abroad, the Medellín Cartel confronted the Colombian state with bombings and selective assassinations. Terrorism multiplied and put the government in check: between September and December 1989, more than 100 devices exploded in Bogotá, Medellín, Cali, Bucaramanga, Cartagena, Barranquilla and Pereira, against government buildings, banking, commercial and service facilities and economic infrastructure. In those three months, including the hitmen, the narco-terrorists were responsible for 289 terrorist attacks in that period, with a fateful balance of 300 civilians killed and more than 1,500 wounded.[202] On November 1, 1989, Judge Mariela Espinosa was murdered on Escobar's orders.[203][204][205][206][207][208][excessive citations]

On November 23, 1989, a lightning operation was launched against the El Oro ranch in Cocorná (Antioquia), where Pablo Escobar and Jorge Luis Ochoa were staying. Escobar and Ochoa managed to escape, but two of his men were killed – one of them his brother-in-law, Fabio Henao – and 55 were arrested.[209][210] Four days later, on November 27, Escobar then planted a bomb on Avianca Flight 203 in an attempt to assassinate Galán's successor, César Gaviria Trujillo, had not boarded the plane on the advice of his security advisers and survived. All 107 people were killed in the blast. Because two Americans were also killed in the bombing, the U.S. government began to intervene directly.[211][212][213] On December 6, 1989, Escobar's hitmen placed a bus bomb in front of the building of the DAS – the Colombian secret police – in an attempt to assassinate its director, General Miguel Alfredo Maza Márquez, who emerged unharmed despite the building being half-destroyed. The bus bomb also destroyed more than 200 commercial establishments around it. 63 civilians were killed and 500 were injured.[214][215][216]

Wave of kidnappings and failed negotiations

On December 15, 1989, Barco's government managed to kill the second leader of the Medellín cartel and its military leader, El Mexicano (Rodríguez Gacha). He was located by an informant working for the Cali Cartel on the northern coast of the country, where he was seeking refuge from the authorities' persecution. Responsible for more than 2,000 homicides and claiming responsibility for the attack on the DAS tower, he was killed after a tough chase between the municipalities of Tolú and Coveñas in the Sucre Department, along with his son Freddy Rodríguez Celades, his main lieutenant Gilberto Rendón Hurtado and four hitmen from his security force. Most of the terrorist attacks of the last few months were attributed to 'El Mexicano'.[217][218]

Although the Medellín Cartel and the government had made a series of approaches to reach negotiations that would lead to the surrender of the drug lords, the intransigence of the US justice system and the recent acts of violence prevented any such option. The Extraditables attempted a new strategy of dialogue and negotiation with the State, wanting to pressure it with the kidnapping of the son of the Secretary of the Presidency, Álvaro Diego Montoya, and two relatives of the President of the Republic, in addition to other personalities. A proposal then arose from former President López Michelsen, supported by former Presidents Julio César Turbay and Misael Pastrana, by Cardinal Mario Rebollo Bravo and by the President of the UP Diego Montaña Cuellar, consisting of the formation of a commission of Notables to negotiate with the narcoterrorists.[219] On January 17, 1990, they responded to the government's proposal, presenting themselves in a statement as legitimate candidates for judicial pardon and expressing a "genuine willingness to negotiate." Immediately afterward, they released the hostages, handed over a bus with a ton of dynamite, and one of the largest drug processing laboratories in Chocó. All process that began after a statement in which Los Extraditables described the declaration of the former presidents and the leader of the UP as a "patriotic invitation," while declaring that they recognized the "victory of the State." In return, the drug traffickers expected the government to create a high-level commission that would be in charge of the legal procedures that would allow their surrender. The government considered names to lead the process and the most likely candidate was Otto Morales Benítez, former government negotiator with the guerrillas.[220] However, the approaches were leaked to the press and the attempt at dialogue and negotiation ended in a new wave of terrorism, and announced that, on the contrary, it would strengthen the extradition process. This did not prevent the complete release of the hostages before the end of January 1990. On January 22, Álvaro Montoya was released near the main entrance of the National University of Colombia, without the sign requiring him to convey any message to the public.[221]

The Extraditables, effectively deceived by the Government and faced with a strong military offensive in Envigado, declared a zone of military operations by the IV Brigade under the command of General Harold Bedoya, the Extraditables ended the truce on March 30, putting a price on the head of each policeman killed. Medellín and its metropolitan area were involved in an urban war, after the first executions of uniformed officers and after the attack against a truck of the Elite Group, which occurred on a bridge in Itagüí on April 11. This attack, which left 20 dead and 100 wounded, was the first of 18 that occurred until the end of July with a balance of 100 fatalities and 450 wounded.[20]

The 1990 presidential elections were marked by constant violence in which not only Galán was killed, but also Bernardo Jaramillo Ossa, of the leftist UP party; and Carlos Pizarro, leader of the dissolved M-19 guerrilla movement. Although the government blamed Escobar for the murders of Jaramillo[222] and Pizarro,[223] they were actually committed by paramilitaries under the command of his allies Fidel and Carlos Castaño Gil. Gradually the cordial relations between the paramilitaries and Los Extraditables would deteriorate because of this.

On May 12, the eve of Mother's Day, bombs exploded in two commercial districts in Bogotá, killing twenty-one people. On the same day in Cali, another terrorist act claimed the lives of nine civilians. At the end of the month, at the same time that a hitman blew himself up in front of the Intercontinental Hotel in Medellín,[224][225] killing six policemen and three passers-by, Senator Federico Estrada Vélez and his driver were gunned down.[226][227] The violence intensified and the victims were thousands: in retaliation for the death of 215 policemen killed between April and July 1990, death squads went up to the communes every night and shot dozens of men, several of children and/or adolescents.

Shortly after Escobar's military chief, Pinina (John Jairo Arias Tascón), was assassinated on June 14,[228][229][230] another series of military actions followed: nineteen young people from Antioquia's high society were killed in the Oporto Bar Massacre[231][232][233][234][235][236][excessive citations] and a car bomb exploded in front of the Libertadores Police Station, killing fourteen civilians. Finally, at the end of July, after a huge operation in Antioquia's Magdalena Medio from which Escobar once again escaped, Los Extraditables declared a new truce and went on the defensive, awaiting the decisions that the incoming Gaviria government might take. In any case, they affirmed the impossibility of surrendering to justice until the State security agencies are restructured and the appropriate legal mechanisms are created to avoid their extradition.[98]

Furthermore, the cartel war did not cease. On June 22, 1989, the Cali Cartel, through its head of security, Jorge Salcedo, hired a group of British mercenaries led by Peter McAleese and sent them to Hacienda Nápoles to attack Escobar, but the operation failed because the helicopter carrying the mercenaries crashed due to overloading.[237]

In November 1989, after the Colombian Professional Football match between Independiente Medellín and América de Cali, referee Álvaro Ortega was murdered on Escobar's orders due to illegal betting with the Cali Cartel according to Popeye and Fernando Rodríguez Mondragón.[238][239][240]

On September 25, 1990, taking advantage of the fact that Pacho Herrera was going to attend a private soccer game on one of his farms in a district of Candelaria (Valle del Cauca), several hitmen dressed in uniforms of the National Army entered the place and carried out the Los Cocos Hacienda Massacre. They opened fire, leaving 18 people dead; however, Pacho Herrera was unharmed and escaped. The attack was ordered by Escobar, who would command a new assault against Herrera on July 27, 1991, at a beach resort located on the highway leading from Cali to Jamundí.[241][242][243][244]

New kidnappings and attacks

Apart from an unfinished peace process, President César Gaviria inherited the "war on drugs" with which his predecessor had sought to reduce the Medellín Cartel and its network of hitmen, declared enemies of the State.[245] Although during his presidential campaign he had shown total support for both the offensive and the measures taken by Barco, including the most feared by narco-terrorists; which was extradition by administrative means; once in office he hinted that the high economic and human cost of this war deserved the search for an alternative solution in which the strengthening of justice would be a key element. On August 12, in any case, in a coup, men from the Elite Group of the police killed Gustavo Gaviria Rivero, Escobar's cousin and right-hand man.[246][247]

Taking advantage of the respite from the unilateral, indefinite truce announced in July by Los Extraditables, Justice Minister Jaime Giraldo Ángel designed the state of siege legislation that would be made public as a "policy of submission to justice."[248][249] This policy, which materialized in five decrees that would later,[250] after a purge, be elevated to permanent legislation in the new Code of Criminal Procedure, aspired in simplified terms to favor, by reducing the sentence of drug traffickers who voluntarily surrendered and confessed to at least one crime, with the guarantee, in some cases conditional, of being tried in the country and held in high-security prisons. The first to accept the offer, between December 1990 and February 1991, were the Ochoa brothers, Jorge Luis, Juan David and Fabio,[251][252] close associates of Escobar, who, suspicious of the intentions of the Government, which had already failed to comply with him previously, organized a series of selective kidnappings of renowned journalists and influential figures in national life.

Escobar ordered the kidnapping of relatives of members of the Government and journalists. From the long list of those kidnapped, the most well-known were: Francisco Santos Calderón (editor-in-chief of the newspaper El Tiempo),[253] Maruja Pachón de Villamizar (journalist and general director of FOCINE, wife of the politician and diplomat Alberto Villamizar),[254] Beatriz Villamizar de Guerrero (sister of Alberto Villamizar and personal assistant of FOCINE), Diana Turbay (director of the television news program Criptón and of the magazine Hoy x Hoy, daughter of the former president of the republic Julio César Turbay) with her journalistic team from Criptón, Marina Montoya de Pérez (sister of the former general secretary of the Presidency Germán Montoya) and who was executed by her captors in retaliation for the failure of the rapprochements with the government at the end of 1989, for the death of hitmen and collaborators of the Cartel at the hands of the police, especially for the death of the brothers Armando and Ricardo Prisco Lopera, leaders of Los Priscos, the armed wing of the cartel, Patricia Echeverri and her daughter Diana Echeverri, political relatives of the former president of the republic Barco, thus putting pressure on the outgoing president and the elected Gaviria to be treated as a political criminal, thus becoming a beneficiary of the pardons reserved for the guerrillas. Escobar also intended to force the Executive to make an agreement tailored to his needs and continued to apply pressure again through armed means, threatening to execute the hostages and to restart his terrorist offensive.[255]

On December 13, 1990, a bomb killed 7 police officers in Medellín and another 7 were killed by hitmen in the first 3 days of January and with a new wave of attacks: a dozen police officers were victims of contract killings, an explosion on a bus left 6 dead and on February 16, a heinous bomb attack against a secret police F2 patrol in Medellín in front of the city's bullring resulted in 22 civilian deaths. Two months later, Escobar's hitmen killed the former Minister of Justice Enrique Low Murtra in Bogotá.[256][257][258][259][260][excessive citations]

Although most of the hostages had been released, not only as a gesture of good faith but also because of the apparent success of negotiations to avoid Escobar's extradition, on January 25, 1991, Diana Turbay fell dead in the arms of her cameraman Richard Becerra in the middle of a shootout during an apparent rescue operation. Turbay's death infuriated Escobar since the journalist was his best card to negotiate his non-extradition to the USA.[261][262][263][264][265][266][267][268][269][270][271][272][273][274][275][excessive citations]

Surrender and submission to justice

Turbay's death motivated the families of the other hostages to seek their release on their own. With only Francisco Santos, Beatriz Villamizar and Maruja Pachón remaining kidnapped, Villamizar was released on February 6, 1991, thanks to the efforts of her husband, Congressman Luis Guerrero. At the same time, the Eudist priest Rafael García-Herreros who had been contacted by an emissary of Escobar, under his orders, saying that he was tired of his war and trusted him for an eventual surrender. On his daily TV show 'El Minuto de Dios', García-Herreros had expressed Escobar's apparent interest in surrendering, but at the same time his doubts.[276]

«Oh, sea of Coveñas! Oh, immense sea! Oh, lonely sea, that knows everything! I want to ask you some things, answer me. You who keep the secrets, I would like to build a great rehabilitation institute for hitmen in Medellín. Talk to me, you who keep the secrets, I would like to talk to Pablo Escobar, on the seashore, right here, the two of us sitting on this beach... They have told me that he wants to surrender, They have told me that he wants to talk to me. Oh, sea! Oh, sea of Coveñas at five in the afternoon, when the sun is setting! What should I do? They tell me that he is tired of his life and his struggle, and I cannot tell anyone, my secret. However, it is drowning me inside... Oh, sea! My God; in your hands we place this day that has already passed and the night that is coming.»

— Priest Rafael García-Herreros, April 19, 1991[277]

García-Herreros traveled to Medellín to meet with Fabio Ochoa Restrepo, patriarch of the Ochoa family, and Ochoa took the priest to the Itagüi prison to introduce him to his sons, imprisoned for surrendering to the 'Policy of Submission to Justice'. Through the Ochoa family, García-Herreros sent a letter to Escobar and Escobar responded with another 4-page letter; in this letter he showed his confidence in the priest but demanded several conditions from the Government for surrender. One of them was that the members of the Elite Corps of the police who had killed his cousin Gustavo Gaviria for violating Human Rights be punished, to which President César Gaviria and his advisor for Security, Rafael Pardo, did not respond to the requests. Days after receiving the message, García-Herreros was summoned to Fabio Ochoa's ranch, where he waited for Escobar's call. Escobar reiterated his desire to surrender but on the condition that he would not be held in the Itagüi prison for fear of being killed, and that the hostages would soon be released. Escobar also clarified that he had not ordered the murders of leftist candidates Jaime Pardo Leal, Bernardo Jaramillo and Carlos Pizarro.[278]

However, Pachón and Santos remained kidnapped for a few more months due to Escobar's distrust of the government, and their release was personally facilitated by Enrique Santos, Santos' father, and Alberto Villamizar, Pachón's husband, with government authorization. García-Herreros was also a mediator not only for the release of Pachón, finally achieved on May 21, 1991, but also for that of Santos a day later, on May 22 of that same year.[279][280][281][254][282][283][276][excessive citations]

Eventually, the government negotiated with Escobar and convinced him to surrender and cease all criminal activity in exchange for a reduced sentence and preferential treatment during his captivity. Although Escobar's eventual surrender had been brewing since November 1990, Escobar, in the midst of his negotiations, managed to obtain permission to build his own prison. For that purpose, and with the collaboration of the mayor of Envigado, Jota Mario Rodríguez, the government was offered a three-hectare plot of land, located in the area of 'La Catedral', where the Claret, a rehabilitation center for drug addicts, was being built. The then Vice Minister of Justice, Francisco Albeiro Zapata, visited the construction site and gave his approval. However, what was unknown was that the property had been purchased by Escobar. In May, more than 60 workers worked on more than 1,800 square meters to build the La Catedral prison. The contract had a rather clause: "No police or military authority will have access to the internal part of the prison."[284] The surrender was to take place on May 18, 1991, but two events prevented it: the origin of the designated prison governor, Jorge Pataquiva, from Girardot, and of his guards, all from Cundinamarca. Escobar wanted all his guards to be from Antioquia. And second, the speech given on May 7 by the priest García Herreros in "El minuto de Dios" (God's Minute): a sermon in which he would not speak of Escobar or the surrender and continued to speak of God and the evil of pornography, but Escobar believed that it was a scolding for him, thinking that he had branded him a "pornography reader."[285] The next day García-Herreros met at La Loma, one of Fabio Ochoa's estates. He clarified that it was due to an editing error in the program and apologized to Escobar, who accepted his apologies but asked that they be made public.[286]

The surrender process was resumed. First, 'Popeye' and Luis Carlos Aguilar 'El Mugre' (the filth) surrendered in the second week of June 1991 to be held in La Catedral prison. Later, on June 19, 1991, the day agreed upon for Escobar's surrender, Villamizar, García-Herreros and Luis Alirio Calle, a journalist admired by Escobar and with whom he maintained communication as a third (unofficial) mediator in his surrender, met at the offices of Criminal Investigation in Medellín. The three of them left in helicopters; Villamizar and García-Herreros in one, and Calle in the other with a smuggled recorder so he could record any important conversations, due to Escobar's demand that they not bring cameras or similar equipment to document his surrender. The helicopters arrived at a farm hidden in the middle of a jungle where Escobar boarded the helicopter where the priest and Villamizar were, and the rest of his men in the other helicopter. Both helicopters departed towards La Catedral where, upon arrival, Escobar surrendered his Sig Sauer pistol to Pataquiva and explored the prison shortly before making his surrender official.[287]

Declaring an end to a series of previous violent acts meant to pressure authorities and public opinion, Escobar surrendered to Colombian authorities in 1991. At the same time of his surrender, on the way to prison, the extradition of Colombian citizens to the United States had been prohibited by the newly approved Colombian Constitution of 1991. This act was controversial, as it was suspected that Escobar and other drug lords had influenced members of the Constituent Assembly in passing the law.[285] Escobar greeted his mother and wife, whom he had not seen in months. He had a short interview with Calle and was finally imprisoned that same night.[285][288]

As a consequence of the policy of peace and strengthening of justice of the President and his cabinet, I have decided to submit to decrees 2047[289][290][291] and 2147,[292][293] 2372[294][295] and 3030 of 1990 and 303 of 1991,[296][297] supported by the Attorney General of the Nation, by the honorable judges of the Supreme Court of Justice and by the vast majority of the people of Colombia...With my presentation and my submission to justice, I also wish to pay tribute to my parents, to my irreplaceable and incomparable wife, to my pacifist son of 14 years, to my toothless dancer of 7 years and to all my family whom I love so much. In these historic moments of the surrender of weapons by the guerrillas and the pacification of the country, I could not remain indifferent to the yearnings for peace of the vast majority of the people of Colombia. Pablo Escobar Gaviria. Envigado, Colombia, June 19, 1991.

— Escobar's Declaration from La Catedral. June 19, 1991.[298]

La Catedral prison

Between June 1991 and July 1992, Colombia experienced a period of relative peace, except for the government's war against the guerrillas, but such peace was superficial. It is said that shortly before his surrender, Escobar had met with his remaining associates Gerardo Moncada and Federico 'Kiko' Galeano, the Castaño Gil brothers and other mid- and low-level gangsters. Escobar, at that meeting, reaffirmed himself as the leader of the Medellin Cartel, and proclaimed himself the creator of the drug trafficking business, which is why he demanded that he be paid high sums of money for each shipment of drugs to the United States; going from being a drug lord to being an extortionist. According to 'Popeye', the apparent surrender at La Catedral would be nothing more than a vacation due to the war that Escobar was waging against the government. Escobar was confined in La Catedral with his older brother Roberto and several of his men; Otoniel González 'Otto', Carlos Aguilar 'Mugre' (The filth), John Jairo Velásquez 'Popeye', Valentín Taborda, Gustavo González 'Tavo', Jorge Eduardo Avendaño 'Tato' y Johnny Rivera 'El Palomo' (The pidgeon), José Fernando Ospina 'El Mago' (The Wizard), John Jairo Betancur 'Icopor' (Polystyrene), Carlos Díaz 'La Garra' (The Claw) y Alfonso León Puerta 'El Angelito'. Except for a few who still had influence in Medellín; Mario Castaño 'Chopo', Brances Muñoz 'Tyson' and John Jairo Posada 'Titi'; as well as his partners Moncada and Galeano who were in charge of shipping the cocaine.[299]

The Israeli firms that were supposed to finish building the prison never completed their work because they were paralyzed by Escobar's payroll in Medellín.[300] Meanwhile, double-bottomed trucks entered La Catedral transporting money, weapons and even people. La Catedral gradually went from being a 'maximum security prison' to a 'maximum comfort prison'; La Catedral, which featured a football pitch, a giant dollhouse, a luxurious living room designed by his wife Victoria Eugenia, a bar, a Jacuzzi, and a waterfall. Also a strong security provided by the Colombian Army outside, restricted airspace and the penitentiary authorities designated by the state to guard his confinement, although the majority actually were Escobar's hitmen in prison guard uniforms.[301][302][299] Escobar also organised soccer games with Colombian national football team players at La Catedral.[303][304] He also had orgies with beauty queens and models, which at one point angered his wife.[305]

Escobar's luxuries were discovered by Attorney General Carlos Gustavo Arrieta, who raised his complaints to President Gaviria, who dismissed them as harmless. Accounts of Escobar's continued criminal activities while in prison began to surface in the media,[306] Although there were unconfirmed rumors that Escobar still maintained control over the Medellín Cartel, Henry Pérez, leader of the paramilitaries of Magdalena Medio, was killed in the middle of religious celebrations in Puerto Boyacá. Pérez, who had long been an ally of Escobar and one of those who attempted to kill Galán in 1989, entered into conflict with Escobar, who ordered his assassination, although Escobar would deny any accusation.[307][308][309][310][311][excessive citations]

Escobar increased the amount of money he demanded from his partners, which gradually began to bother them. On July 4, 1991, 'Tyson' and 'Titi' accidentally find a stash belonging to Gerardo Moncada with 23 million dollars. They both report their discovery to 'Chopo' and he reports it to Escobar. 'Titi' along with 'Chopo' steal the money and take it to La Catedral. Escobar meets Moncada and Galeano believing that they are hiding drug money from him. After a slight argument, both men offer Escobar a good part of the money found. 'Chopo' goads Escobar that both men may have more money hidden, which Moncada and Galeano flatly deny. Escobar believes 'Chopo' more and orders him and 'Popeye' to kill, dismember and incinerate them.[312][313][314][315] Escobar had also invited the Castaño brothers to appear at 'La Catedral', but they did not attend.[316] Escobar had also summoned the Castaño brothers to appear at 'La Catedral', but they did not show up due to an apparent landslide on the road. 'Chopo' left La Catedral in Federico Galeano's car, but when Don Berna, Galeano's head of security, accompanied by Rafael Galeano, demanded to see Federico, a shootout broke out in which Galeano ended up wounded in the arm, but Don Berna and Galeano managed to escape and the Castaño brothers met up. Seeing the reaches to which Escobar had reached, they decided to join forces to create the vigilante group Los Pepes (Persecuted by Pablo Escobar).[317][318][319][320][321][excessive citations]

While the rest of the relatives of Moncada and Galeano were murdered in Medellín and its surrounding towns, Mireya Galeano joined the Pepes, and was helped by Rodolfo Ospina Baraya 'Chapulín', secret associate of the Medellín Cartel and grandson of the former president Mariano Ospina Pérez, sends a video to the Prosecutor General's Office giving statements about what happened in La Catedral.[322][323][324] Furious, general prosecutor Gustavo De Greiff showed the evidence to Gaviria, who, outraged, called a Security Council attended by the ministers of defense and justice, and the commanders of the army and the police, Fernando Britto, head of DAS, Arrieta and Fabio Villegas, secretary general of the presidency; which prompted the government to attempt to move him to a more conventional jail on 22 July 1992. During 21 July, 1991, it was decided that the army would take over the prison in order to take Escobar and his men prisoner and transfer them to a military garrison. It was also decided that those in charge of this task would be Colonel Hernando Navas Rubio, national director of prisons, and Eduardo Mendoza, vice-minister of justice. Both went in the same car to El Dorado airport in Bogotá, unaware of their functions. Upon arriving at the José María Cordova airport in Rionegro, they were informed by Brigadier General Gustavo Pardo Ariza.[325][326][327]

Navas, along with the army, would begin the militarization of the prison and coordinate the transfer of Escobar and his men, while Mendoza, as vice-minister, would represent the government in the operation. However, the operation failed; most of the soldiers were resting because they had marched on July 20th to commemorate Independence Day; several trucks with not many soldiers were going directly to the mountain where La Catedral was located, something that Escobar noticed through the peasants in the area on his payroll; in addition to the chain of errors committed that same night. With the permission of Pardo Ariza, Navas and Mendoza arrived at La Catedral. Navas entered disobeying the direct orders of the presidency and informed Escobar of the government's decision to militarize the prison and transfer it to a military base. Escobar demanded that a government representative attend, making Mendoza enter as well. Feeling betrayed by the government for not fulfilling what was agreed in surrender, Escobar called the Nariño Palace. Mendoza spoke first and Escobar, when he came to the phone, asked to speak to the president or, failing that, to the minister of justice, but both refused. Escobar took both officials hostage and made a second call to the Presidential Palace; but the secretary general Fabio Villegas Restrepo answered, announcing to Navas and Mendoza that they were dismissed.[328][329][330][331][332][333][excessive citations] Escobar's influence allowed him to discover the plan in advance and make a successful escape; mistakenly thinking that he would be extradited or killed, Escobar and his men flee from La Catedral; they kick a wall made of plaster instead of concrete, and take advantage of the darkness and fog in the area and the blackout of the 'Gaviria Hour', spending the remainder of his life evading the police.[334][285][335][336]In the early hours of July 22, the missing soldiers arrive and invade La Catedral, rescuing Navas and Mendoza and capturing a few of Escobar's hitmen. It is also discovered that the soldiers guarding the prison outside had been bribed by Escobar.[337][338][339][340][341][342][343][excessive citations]

Escape and final stage

Wanted poster for Pablo Escobar, 1992.

Escobar's escape represented the biggest mockery of the Gaviria government in the eyes of the public, and Colombian justice would end up being discredited internationally.[344] The government reactivated the Elite Group, renaming it the Search Bloc, a body made up of the National Police and the National Army with the collaboration of the DEA to hunt down the fugitives and dismantle their criminal empire once and for all. The leaders of the Cali Cartel were responsible for unleashing the war again, by activating a car bomb in Medellín that they attributed to their enemies from Antioquia, at the same time that they decided to finance Los Pepes.[345][346][347]

While Escobar ordered the murder of police officers, new terrorist attacks with car bombs and some selective assassinations, the Search Bloc was only able to carry out raids and the shooting down of 'Tyson' on October 28, 1992, corrupt police elements allied with Los Pepes in order to finish off Escobar and his thugs, specially Police Colonel Danilo González.[348] Following a chess-like tactic; In order to take pieces from the opponent, both the Pepes and the Search Bloc were dealing blows to Escobar's hitman structure.[349][350] Although the Colombian government offered a reward of one billion Colombian pesos for the capture of Escobar, the US offered two million dollars. Escobar and his men did not sit still and continued their crime spree. Escobar's hitmen murdered the faceless public order judge Myriam Rocío Vélez;[351][352][353] the captain of the judicial police Fernando Posada Hoyos, one of the staunchest enemies of the Medellín Cartel;[354][355] and they kidnapped and murdered Lizandro Ospina Baraya, brother of 'Chapulín' and also grandson of former president Ospina Pérez in retaliation for testifying against Escobar in court for the murder of Galán.[356][357] The car bombs continued in the streets of several Colombian cities.[358] By March 29, 1993, most of Escobar's hitmen had been arrested or killed. The final surrender of 'Popeye', 'El Mugre' and 'El Osito', Escobar's older brother, stands out on October 28, 1992. That surrender had been one of Escobar's gestures trying to negotiate another surrender, which was ignored by the government demanding an unconditional surrender.[359][360][361][362]

For their part, Los Pepes dedicated themselves to killing Escobar's front men, accountants, lawyers and family members, as well as destroying their properties and undermining their finances.[98][363][364][365][366][367][368][369][excessive citations] Although Escobar also responded in kind and publicly revealed their names, this did not prevent both Los Pepes and the Search Bloc from maintaining a superior advantage over Escobar, whose last car bomb attack under their orders was in the Centro 93 Mall in northern Bogotá, on April 15, 1993, ironically, the day on which the deadline imposed by the government on Escobar for his unconditional surrender expired, which was not an option for Escobar while he and/or his family were in danger of dying at the hands of Los Pepes.[370][371][372][373]

On April 17, 1993, Guido Parra Montoya, Escobar's lawyer, and his son Guido Andrés Parra were kidnapped and murdered by the Pepes, and their corpses were abandoned in an unpopulated area of Envigado.[374][375][376][377]

Death

Members of Search Bloc celebrate over Escobar's body on 2 December 1993. His death ended a 16-month search effort.
The tomb of Pablo Escobar and family in the Monte Sacro Cemetery, Itagüí

That they will never catch me in the great fucking life, and that from the jungle I will order them all to be killed and in the long run the ones who will lose will be them.

— Audio intercepted of Escobar speaking in a threatening tone.[378]

Although he managed to evade the Search Bloc for another 6 months, by October 1992, Escobar had lost all of his power; his last chief of bodyguards, 'El Angelito', was killed by the police on October 6 along with his brother, Álvaro Puerta.[379] Escobar tried on several occasions to negotiate his surrender in exchange for safeguarding his family, but his proposal found no support in the government. His mother was the victim of several unsuccessful assassination attempts by the Pepes,[380] and his brother Roberto, despite being in prison, was the victim of a letter bomb sent by the Pepes that left him blind in one eye.[381][382]

Escobar faced threats from the Colombian police, the U.S. government and his rivals Pepes, and the Cali Cartel. By this reason Escobar attempted to get his family (his wife Victoria Henao and his children Juan Pablo along with his girlfriend Doria Andrea Ochoa, and his youngest daughter Manuela)[383] out of the country; twice to the United States without any success, and finally to Europe with a stopover in Germany, but the German authorities were warned by both the Colombian police and the DEA (with two agents on board the plane), and they were all immediately deported to Colombia.[384][385][386][387] Upon arrival at El Dorado airport, the Escobar Henao family was taken into the custody of the Colombian authorities and confined to an apartment in the Hotel Tequendama Residences in the International Center of Bogotá, under strict police surveillance.[388][389][390]

Knowing that the Tequendama Residences belonged to the Retirement Fund of the Military Forces, Escobar knew that the phones were tapped. The government took advantage of Escobar's constant concern for his family, which they used as bait to locate him with French and British technology that they had acquired with the help of the DEA; which not only identified the calls but also triangulated his location.[391] Escobar also knew that he could not spend more than two minutes making a call. When calling Residencias Tequendama he used to fake his voice, pretending to be a reporter, in order to be able to speak to his family.[392][393] With no men or money, Escobar, who was already suffering from gastritis, tried to create a guerrilla movement called 'Antioquia Independiente', but instead preferred to make approaches to the FARC to become an accountant for the money from extortion and kidnappings, and for the drug trafficking business in which they had begun to venture a few years earlier. None of these initiatives came to fruition.[394][395]

On December 1, 1993, Escobar celebrated his last birthday accompanied by his cousin Luzmila Gaviria,[396][397] his mother and Álvaro de Jesús Agudelo 'Limón', the latter being his last bodyguard but who had previously been his brother Roberto's driver.[396][398][399] The next day, on 2 December 1993, desperate, Escobar called his family again. Although in the previous days Escobar had been moving in a taxi accompanied by 'Limón' to avoid being located and calling for less than 2 minutes, Escobar remained inside the house, but that day he managed to avoid being located by speaking for less than two minutes. Following the same routine, Escobar continued calling pretending to be a journalist, but the second call went over two minutes, so he was immediately located. Escobar was found in a house in Los Olivos neighbourhood, a middle-class residential area of Medellín close to Atanasio Girardot Sports Complex by Colombian special forces, using technology provided by the United States, which allowed them to trace Escobar's location after he made a long call to his family. Police tried to arrest Escobar but the situation quickly escalated to an exchange of gunfire. Escobar was shot and killed while trying to escape from the roof, along with 'Limón', who was also shot. He was hit by bullets in the torso and feet, and a bullet, which struck him in the head, killing him. This sparked debate about whether he killed himself or whether he was shot and killed.[46][400][401][402][403][404][excessive citations]

There are several hypotheses about his death:

Aftermath of his death

Soon after Escobar's death and the subsequent fragmentation of the Medellín Cartel, the cocaine market became dominated by the rival Cali Cartel until the mid-1990s when its leaders were either killed or captured by the Colombian government. The Robin Hood image that Escobar had cultivated maintained a lasting influence in Medellín. Many there, especially many of the city's poor whom Escobar had aided while he was alive, mourned his death, and over 25,000 people attended his funeral. Some of them consider him a saint and pray to him for receiving divine help. Escobar was buried at the Monte Sacro Cemetery.[424]

Virginia Vallejo's testimony

On 4 July 2006, Virginia Vallejo, a television anchorwoman romantically involved with Escobar from 1983 to 1987, offered Attorney General Mario Iguarán her testimony in the trial against former Senator Alberto Santofimio, who was accused of conspiracy in the 1989 assassination of presidential candidate Luis Carlos Galán. Iguarán acknowledged that, although Vallejo had contacted his office on 4 July, the judge had decided to close the trial on 9 July, several weeks before the prospective closing date. The action was seen as too late.[425][426]

On 18 July 2006, Vallejo was taken to the United States on a special flight of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) for "safety and security reasons" due to her cooperation in high-profile criminal cases.[427][428] On 24 July, a video in which Vallejo had accused Santofimio of instigating Escobar to eliminate presidential candidate Galán was aired by RCN Television of Colombia. The video was seen by 14 million people, and was instrumental for the reopened case of Galán's assassination. On 31 August 2011 Santofimio was sentenced to 24 years in prison for his role in the crime.[429][430]

Role in the Palace of Justice siege

Escobar funded the M-19 communist guerrilla for the assault of the Colombian Palace of Justice.

Among Escobar's biographers, only Vallejo has given a detailed explanation of his role in the 1985 Palace of Justice siege. She stated that Escobar had financed the operation, which was committed by M-19; she blamed the army for the killings of more than 100 people, including 11 Supreme Court magistrates, M-19 members, and employees of the cafeteria. Her statements prompted the reopening of the case in 2008; Vallejo was asked to testify, and many of the events she had described in her book and testimonial were confirmed by Colombia's Commission of Truth.[431][432] These events led to further investigation into the siege that resulted with the conviction of a high-ranking former colonel and a former general, later sentenced to 30 and 35 years in prison, respectively, for the forced disappearance of the detained after the siege.[433][434] Vallejo would subsequently testify in Galán's assassination.[435] In her book, Amando a Pablo, odiando a Escobar (Loving Pablo, Hating Escobar), she had accused several politicians, including Colombian presidents Alfonso López Michelsen, Ernesto Samper, and Álvaro Uribe of having links to drug cartels.[436]

The surviving members of the extinct guerrilla group have reiterated their statements that Escobar never financed the assault taking into account the war they waged with his former armed wing MAS, and that the assault only had political purposes in the midst of his 'Campaign for Colombia'.[437] The existence of original and copied files on the crimes of the Medellin Cartel in the Foreign Ministry, US and Colombian courts, and in the American embassy in Bogota refutes any theory of Escobar's involvement.[107][438]

Relatives

Escobar's widow (María Henao, now María Isabel Santos Caballero), son (Juan Pablo, now Sebastián Marroquín Santos) and daughter (Manuela) fled Colombia in 1995 after failing to find a country that would grant them asylum.[439] Despite Escobar's numerous and continual infidelities, Maria remained supportive of her husband. Members of the Cali Cartel even replayed their recordings of her conversations with Pablo for their wives to demonstrate how a woman should behave.[440] This attitude proved to be the reason the cartel did not kill her and her children after Pablo's death, although the group demanded and received millions of dollars in reparations for Escobar's war against them. Henao even successfully negotiated for her son's life by personally guaranteeing he would not seek revenge against the cartel or participate in the drug trade.[441]

Sebastián Marroquín (born as Juan Pablo Escobar) is an outspoken critic of the violent deeds of his father.

On February 1993, n the midst of the war between Escobar and his men against the Pepes, Escobar tried to get his family to the United States. The first time was unsuccessful because the immigration authorities required Victoria Eugenia to provide a permit signed by Escobar before a notary in which he allowed his children to leave the country, a document that was in order with others, but the authorities did everything to make Escobar's family miss the flight.[380] The second time, in October 1993 even though the Escobar Henao family had all the documents in order, the visas of all its members, especially Victoria Eugenia Henao, were cancelled.[442][443][444] The third attempt was towards Europe. Although Germany was going to be a country where they would make a shortage, both the DEA and the Colombian authorities alerted the German authorities who immediately deported the Escobar Henao family from Frankfurt Airport to Colombia.[384][387][386] After escaping first to Mozambique, then to Brazil, the family settled in Argentina.[445] Living under her assumed name, Henao became a successful real estate entrepreneur until one of her business associates discovered her true identity, and Henao absconded with her earnings. Local media were alerted, and after being exposed as Escobar's widow, Henao was imprisoned for eighteen months while her finances were investigated. Ultimately, authorities were unable to link her funds to illegal activity, and she was released.[446] According to her son, Henao fell in love with Escobar "because of his naughty smile [and] the way he looked at [her]. [He] was affectionate and sweet. A great lover. I fell in love with his desire to help people and his compassion for their hardship. We [would] drive to places where he dreamed of building schools for the poor. From [the] beginning, he was always a gentleman."[447] María Victoria Henao de Escobar, with her new identity as María Isabel Santos Caballero, continues to live in Buenos Aires with her son and daughter.[448] On 5 June 2018, the Argentine federal judge Nestor Barral accused her and her son, Sebastián Marroquín Santos, of money laundering with two Colombian drug traffickers.[449][450][451] The judge ordered the seizing of assets for about $1m each.[452]

Argentinian filmmaker Nicolas Entel's documentary Sins of My Father (2009) chronicles Marroquín's efforts to seek forgiveness, on behalf of his father, from the sons of Rodrigo Lara, Colombia's justice minister who was assassinated in 1984, as well as from the sons of Luis Carlos Galán, the presidential candidate who was assassinated in 1989. The film was shown at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival and premiered in the U.S. on HBO in October 2010.[453] In 2014, Marroquín published Pablo Escobar, My Father under his birth name. The book provides a firsthand insight into details of his father's life and describes the fundamentally disintegrating effect of his death upon the family. Marroquín aimed to publish the book in hopes to resolve any inaccuracies regarding his father's excursions during the 1990s.[454]

Escobar's sister, Luz Maria Escobar, made multiple gestures in attempts to make amends for the drug baron's crimes. These include making public statements in the press, leaving letters on the graves of his victims, and, on the 20th anniversary of his death, organizing a public memorial for his victims.[455] Escobar's body was exhumed on 28 October 2006 at the request of some of his relatives in order to take a DNA sample to confirm the alleged paternity of an illegitimate child and remove all doubt about the identity of the body that had been buried next to his parents for 12 years.[456] A video of the exhumation was broadcast by RCN, angering Marroquín, who accused his uncle, Roberto Escobar, and cousin, Nicolas Escobar, of being "merchants of death" by allowing the video to air.[457]

Hacienda Nápoles

After Escobar's death, the ranch, zoo and citadel at Hacienda Nápoles were given by the government to low-income families under a law called Extinción de Dominio (Domain Extinction). The property has been converted into a theme park surrounded by four luxury hotels overlooking the zoo.[458]

Escobar Inc

In 2014, Roberto Escobar founded Escobar Inc with Olof K. Gustafsson and registered Successor-In-Interest rights for his brother Pablo Escobar in California, United States.[459]

Hippos

Escobar kept four hippos in a private menagerie at Hacienda Nápoles. They were deemed too difficult to seize and move after Escobar's death, and hence left on the untended estate. By 2007, the animals had multiplied to 16 and had taken to roaming the area for food in the nearby Magdalena River.[460][461] In 2009, two adults and one calf escaped the herd and, after attacking humans and killing cattle, one of the adults (called "Pepe") was killed by hunters under authorization of the local authorities.[461] As of early 2014, 40 hippos have been reported to exist in Puerto Triunfo, Antioquia Department, from the original four belonging to Escobar.[462] As of 2016, without management, the population size is likely to more than double in the next decade.[463]

The National Geographic Channel produced a documentary about them titled Cocaine Hippos.[464] A report published in a Yale student magazine noted that local environmentalists are campaigning to protect the animals, although there is no clear plan for what will happen to them.[465] In 2018, National Geographic published another article on the hippos which found disagreement among environmentalists on whether they were having a positive or negative impact but that conservationists and locals – particularly those in the tourism industry – were mostly in support of their continued presence.[466] By October 2021, the Colombian government had started a program of chemically sterilizing the animals.[467]

Apartment demolition

On 22 February 2019, at 11:53 AM local time, Medellín authorities demolished the six-story Edificio Mónaco apartment complex in the El Poblado neighborhood where, according to retired Colombian general Rosso José Serrano, Escobar planned some of his most brazen attacks. The building was initially built for Escobar's wife but was gutted by a Cali Cartel car bomb in 1988 and had remained unoccupied ever since, becoming an attraction to foreign tourists seeking out Escobar's physical legacy. Mayor Federico Gutierrez had been pushing to raze the building and erect in its place a park honoring the thousands of cartel victims, including four presidential candidates and some 500 police officers. Colombian President Ivan Duque said the demolition "means that history is not going to be written in terms of the perpetrators, but by recognizing the victims", hoping the demolition would showcase that the city had evolved significantly and had more to offer than the legacy left by the cartels.[468]

Personal life

Family and relationships

In March 1976, the 26-year-old Escobar married María Victoria Henao Vallejo, who was 15. The relationship was discouraged by the Henao Vallejo family, who considered Escobar socially inferior; the pair eloped, despite being a close friend of Mario Henao Vallejo, who would become his brother-in-law.[469] They had two children: Juan Pablo (now Sebastián Marroquín) and Manuela. In 2007, the journalist Virginia Vallejo published her memoir Amando a Pablo, odiando a Escobar (Loving Pablo, Hating Escobar), in which she describes her romantic relationship with Escobar and the links of her lover with several presidents, Caribbean dictators, and high-profile politicians.[470] Her book inspired the movie Loving Pablo (2017).[471] A drug distributor, Griselda Blanco, is also reported to have conducted a clandestine but passionate relationship with Escobar; several items in her diary link him with the nicknames "Coque de Mi Rey" (My Coke King) and "Polla Blanca" (White Cock).[472]

Properties

After becoming wealthy, Escobar created or bought numerous residences and safe houses, with the Hacienda Nápoles gaining significant notoriety. The luxury house contained a colonial house, a sculpture park, and a complete zoo with animals from various continents, including elephants, exotic birds, giraffes, and hippopotamuses. Escobar had also planned to construct a Greek-style citadel near it, and though construction of the citadel was started, it was never finished.[458]

Escobar owned a home in the US under his own name: a 6,500 square foot (604 m2), pink, waterfront mansion situated at 5860 North Bay Road in Miami Beach, Florida. The four-bedroom estate, built in 1948 on Biscayne Bay, was seized by the US federal government in the 1980s. Later, the dilapidated property was owned by Christian de Berdouare, proprietor of the Chicken Kitchen fast-food chain, who had bought it in 2014. De Berdouare would later hire a documentary film crew and professional treasure hunters to search the edifice before and after demolition, for anything related to Escobar or his cartel. They would find unusual holes in floors and walls, as well as a safe that was stolen from its hole in the marble flooring before it could be properly examined.[473]

Escobar owned a huge Caribbean getaway on Isla Grande, the largest of the cluster of the 27 coral cluster islands comprising Islas del Rosario, located about 35 km (22 mi) from Cartagena. The compound, now half-demolished and overtaken by vegetation and wild animals, featured a mansion, apartments, courtyards, a large swimming pool, a helicopter landing pad, reinforced windows, tiled floors, and a large but unfinished building to the side of the mansion.[474]

Books

Fernando Botero's portrayal of Escobar's death

Escobar has been the subject of several books, including the following:

  • Escobar (2010), by Roberto Escobar, written by his brother shows how he became infamous and ultimately died.[475]
  • Escobar Gaviria, Roberto (2016). My Brother – Pablo Escobar. Escobar, Inc. ISBN 978-0692706374.
  • Kings of Cocaine (1989), by Guy Gugliotta, retells the history and operations of the Medellín Cartel, and Escobar's role within it.[476]
  • Killing Pablo: The Hunt for the World's Greatest Outlaw (2001), by Mark Bowden,[477][478] relates how Escobar was killed and his cartel dismantled by U.S. special forces and intelligence, the Colombian military, and Los Pepes.[479]
  • Pablo Escobar: My Father (2016), by Juan Pablo Escobar, translated by Andrea Rosenberg.[480]
  • Pablo Escobar: Beyond Narcos (2016), by Shaun Attwood, tells the story of Escobar and the Medellín Cartel in the context of the failed War on Drugs; ISBN 978-1537296302
  • American Made: Who Killed Barry Seal? Pablo Escobar or George HW Bush (2016), by Shaun Attwood, tells Pablo's story as a suspect in the murder of CIA pilot Barry Seal; ISBN 978-1537637198
  • Loving Pablo, Hating Escobar (2017) by Virginia Vallejo, originally published by Penguin Random House in Spanish in 2007, and later translated to 16 languages.
  • News of a Kidnapping, (original Spanish title: Noticia de un secuestro) non-fiction 1996 book by Gabriel García Márquez, and published in English in 1997.

Films

Two major feature films on Escobar, Escobar (2009) and Killing Pablo (2011), were announced in 2007.[481] Details about them, and additional films about Escobar, are listed below.

Television

  • In 2005, Court TV (now TruTV) crime documentary series Mugshots released an episode on Escobar titled "Pablo Escobar – Hunting The Druglord".[491]
  • In the 2007 HBO television series, Entourage, actor Vincent Chase (played by Adrian Grenier) is cast as Escobar in a fictional film entitled Medellín.[492]
  • One of ESPN's 30 for 30 series films, The Two Escobars (2010), by directors Jeff and Michael Zimbalist, looks back at Colombia's World Cup run in 1994 and the relationship between sports and the country's criminal gangs — notably the Medellín narcotics cartel run by Escobar. The other Escobar in the film title refers to former Colombian defender Andrés Escobar (no relation to Pablo), who was shot and killed one month after conceding an own goal that contributed to the elimination of the Colombian national team from the 1994 FIFA World Cup.[493]
  • Caracol TV produced a television series, El cartel (The Cartel), which began airing on 4 June 2008 where Escobar is portrayed by an unknown model when he is shot down by Cartel del Sur's hitmen.
  • Also Caracol TV produced a TV Series, Pablo Escobar: El Patrón del Mal (Pablo Escobar, The Boss of Evil), which began airing on 28 May 2012, and stars Andrés Parra as Pablo Escobar. It is based on Alonso Salazar's book La parábola de Pablo.[494] Parra reprises his role in TV series Football Dreams, A World of Passion and in the first season of El Señor de los Cielos. Parra has declared not to play the character again so as not to typecast himself.
  • RTI Producciones produced a TV Series for RCN Televisión, Tres Caínes, was released on 4 March 2013, which Escobar is portrayed by the Colombian actor Juan Pablo Franco (who portrayed general Muriel Peraza in Pablo Escobar: El Patrón del Mal) in the first phase of the series. Franco reprises his role in Surviving Escobar: Alias JJ.
  • Also in 2013, Fox Telecolombia produced for RCN Televisión a TV Series, Alias El Mexicano, released on 5 November 2013, where Escobar was portrayed by an unknown actor in a minor role.
  • A Netflix original television series depicting the story of Escobar, titled Narcos, was released on 28 August 2015, starring Brazilian actor Wagner Moura as Pablo.[495] Season two premiered on the streaming service on 2 September 2016.[496]
  • In 2016, Teleset and Sony Pictures Television produced for RCN Televisión the TV Series En la boca del lobo, was released on 16 August 2016, which Escobar is portrayed by Fabio Restrepo (who portrayed Javier Ortiz in Pablo Escobar: El Patrón del Mal) as the character of Flavio Escolar.
  • National Geographic in 2016 broadcast a biography series Facing that included an episode featuring Escobar.[497]
  • On 24 January 2018, Netflix released the 68-minute-long documentary Countdown to Death: Pablo Escobar directed by Santiago Diaz and Pablo Martin Farina.[498][499]
  • Killing Escobar was a documentary televised in the UK in 2021. It concerned a failed attempt by mercenaries, contracted by the Cali Cartel and led by Peter McAleese, to assassinate Escobar in 1989.
  • Fox Telecolombia produced in 2019 a TV Series, El General Naranjo, which aired on 24 May 2019, which Escobar is portrayed by the Colombian actor Federico Rivera.

Music

  • The 2013 song "Pablo" by American rapper E-40 serves as an ode to the legacy of Pablo Escobar.[500]
  • The 2016 album The Life of Pablo by American rapper Kanye West was named after the three Pablos who inspired and represented some part of the album, with one of them being Pablo Escobar.[501]
  • Dubdogz's "Pablo Escobar" (feat. Charlott Boss), released in 2020, has garnered more than 5.6 million views for its official music video.[502]
  • The 2018 hit single Narcos by the Atlanta-based rap group Migos from their album Culture II makes references to Pablo Escobar as well as the Medellin Cartel, and the Netflix series Narcos.[503]

References

  1. ^ "Discreción, un secuestro y una millonaria herencia: La historia del misterioso padre de Pablo Escobar". 23 September 2018.
  2. ^ "La herencia desconocida del papá de Pablo Escobar". 5 November 2016.
  3. ^ "Mamá de Pablo Escobar y su extraña petición para el entierro del narcotraficante". 29 June 2023.
  4. ^ ""No me avergüenza ser la mamá de Pablo Escobar": La madre del jefe del Cartel de Medellín dedicó sus últimos días a limpiar la imagen de su hijo". 22 April 2023.
  5. ^ "La Oficina, la banda de sicarios que creó Pablo Escobar y que el Gobierno colombiano aún no logra doblegar". 2 June 2019.
  6. ^ "Pablo Escobar en El País". September 2024.
  7. ^ a b Macias, Amanda (21 September 2015). "10 facts reveal the absurdity of Pablo Escobar's wealth". businessinsider.com. Insider Inc. Archived from the original on 18 October 2023. Retrieved 28 July 2018.
  8. ^ "Here's How Rich Pablo Escobar Would Be If He Was Alive Today". UNILAD. 13 September 2016. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 28 July 2018.
  9. ^ "Billonarios!". 2 November 1987.
  10. ^ Escobar, Juan Pablo (2014). Pablo Escobar, My Father. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 469.
  11. ^ "Internacional – Noticias de El Salvador – Noticias de El Salvador". Archived from the original on 7 May 2016.
  12. ^ "Forbes History: The Original 1987 List of International Billionaires". Forbes.
  13. ^ "Los Otros Dueños del Pais". 26 August 1996.
  14. ^ "Pablo Escobar Gaviria – English Biography – Articles and Notes". ColombiaLink.com. Archived from the original on 8 November 2006. Retrieved 16 March 2011.
  15. ^ Hermoso, Borja (20 May 2010). "Fútbol, droga y muerte en Colombia". blogs.elpais.com.
  16. ^ "Se confiesa "Popeye", mano derecha de Pablo Escobar". 14 August 2005. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014.
  17. ^ "Una estratagema derrotó al criminal más buscado del mundo". eltiempo.com.
  18. ^ "¿Es "el Chapo" Guzmán el Pablo Escobar del siglo XXI?". 23 February 2014.
  19. ^ "Recuerdan asesinato de 'El Patrón' Escobar". 3 December 2018.
  20. ^ a b "Cuando Escobar les puso precio a las vidas de los policías". December 2018.
  21. ^ "Las cifras del mal". 23 November 2013.
  22. ^ a b Sabogal, Hugo (29 August 1988). "Lucha a muerte de los cárteles colombianos de Cali y Medellín por el control del narcotráfico en Nueva York". El País.
  23. ^ a b "Cronologia de la Guerra". 29 October 1990.
  24. ^ "Familiares exhumaron cadáver de Pablo Escobar para verificar plenamente su identidad". El Tiempo.[permanent dead link]
  25. ^ "Decline of the Medellín Cartel and the Rise of the Cali Mafia". U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. Archived from the original on 18 January 2006. Retrieved 13 February 2010.
  26. ^ "Pablo Escobar: Biography". Biography.com. Archived from the original on 30 June 2023. Retrieved 17 July 2019.
  27. ^ "Escobar's Former Mansion Will Now Be A Theme Park". Medellín Living. 13 January 2014. Archived from the original on 18 October 2023. Retrieved 17 July 2019.
  28. ^ "Roberto, hermano de Pablo Escobar: "Mi familia tiene raíces españolas, del País Vasco"". Cuatro (in Spanish). 19 April 2018. Retrieved 28 August 2024.
  29. ^ "Robo de naranjas y falsificación de diplomas escolares: Los insólitos comienzos en el delito del niño Pablo Escobar". 14 October 2018.
  30. ^ "Pablo Escobar: Biografía, de qué murió y curiosidades que quizá no sabías". 12 April 2024.
  31. ^ "Cómo era Pablo Escobar, el narcotraficante más temible del mundo". 21 November 2017.
  32. ^ "Pablo Escobar". 30 August 2021.
  33. ^ "Se Entregó Hermano de Pablo Escobar". 22 June 1991.
  34. ^ "Family tree of Iván Restrepo-Jaramillo (Ivanrepo)". Archived from the original on 3 June 2014.
  35. ^ "La Familia Escobar Gaviria Regresó a Medellín". 9 July 1993.
  36. ^ "Alba Marina Escobar, la consentida del capo más peligroso del mundo". Noticias Caracol (in Spanish). 26 October 2014. Retrieved 18 October 2024.
  37. ^ "Qué dicen las cartas que dejaron en la tumba de Pablo Escobar en el aniversario 25 de su muerte". 4 December 2018.
  38. ^ "Luis Fernando Escobar Gaviria". May 2022.
  39. ^ "Roberto Gaviria Cobaleda". 29 April 2022.
  40. ^ "El cuadro de Dalí, el escondite para sus amantes y otras anécdotas increíbles de Pablo Escobar, a 25 años de su muerte". 2 December 2018.
  41. ^ "José Obdulio Gaviria cumpliendo el sueño de su primo Pablo Escobar". 11 July 2016.
  42. ^ "20 de las frases más recordadas del narcotraficante Pablo Escobar, quien a veces decía ser Dios". www.guioteca.com.
  43. ^ "Readecuan Aeropuerto de Frontino". www.presidencia.gov.co. Archived from the original on 17 November 2006.
  44. ^ "Pablo Escobar: The Rise and Fall of the 'King of Cocaine'". Archived from the original on 15 February 2024. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
  45. ^ Deas, Malcolm (4 December 1993). "Obituary: Pablo Escobar". Independent. Archived from the original on 18 August 2016. Retrieved 29 July 2016.
  46. ^ a b c Minster, Christopher (8 July 2016). "Biography of Pablo Escobar". About.com. About, Inc. Archived from the original on 14 January 2016. Retrieved 29 July 2016.
  47. ^ Chepesiuk, Ron (2013). Escobar Versus Cali: The War of the Cartels. Strategic Media Books. ISBN 9781939521019.
  48. ^ Escobar, Roberto (2012). Escobar. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 978-1848942912. Archived from the original on 18 October 2023. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  49. ^ Bowden, Mark (2001). Killing Pablo. London: Atlantic Books. pp. 33–37. ISBN 978-1-84354-651-1. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  50. ^ Vélez, Sergio Esteban (9 August 2012). "Lo malo y lo bueno". www.elmundo.com. Archived from the original on 12 January 2014.
  51. ^ "Datos del temeroso narcotraficante Pablo Escobar". 2 December 2013.
  52. ^ "15 datos que quizás no conocías de Pablo Escobar". 2 December 2016.
  53. ^ "Los Jinetes de la Cocaína". www.derechos.org.
  54. ^ "10 facts reveal the absurdity of Pablo Escobar's wealth". Business Insider.
  55. ^ "La arremetida contra la justicia | Pablo Escobar, dos décadas después". elespectador.com. 4 September 2012. Archived from the original on 29 September 2012.
  56. ^ Torres, Rubén Ortiz (9 February 2020). "Plata O Plomo O Glitter". royaleprojects.com. Archived from the original on 18 October 2023. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  57. ^ Bowden 2001, pp. 40–42.
  58. ^ a b Rubio, Mauricio. "Colombia: Coexistence, Legal Confrontation, and War with Illegal Armed Groups" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 15 November 2021.
  59. ^ Collett, Merrill (14 November 1987). "Colombia's Drug Lords Waging War on Leftists". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 15 March 2023. Retrieved 13 August 2023.
  60. ^ Chepsiuk, Ron (1999). The War on Drugs: An International Encyclopedia. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-Clio. p. 133. ISBN 978-0-87436-985-4. Archived from the original on 7 June 2022. Retrieved 7 June 2022.
  61. ^ "The godfather of cocaine". Frontline. WGBH. Archived from the original on 2 April 2016. Retrieved 7 September 2017.
  62. ^ "Pablo Escobar's Son: 'Forbes is Lying'". Forbes.
  63. ^ Héctor Latorre (2 December 2003). "Colombia: 10 años sin Escobar".
  64. ^ "Thirty Years of America's Drug War | Drug Wars | FRONTLINE | PBS". PBS.
  65. ^ "Pablo Escobar: Interesting Facts You May Not Know About the King of Cocaine". LATIN POST. 25 October 2020. Archived from the original on 18 October 2023. Retrieved 13 August 2023.
  66. ^ Herzog, Rudolph (9 July 2015). "Pablo Escobar Biopic: The Cocaine King Full of Contradictions". Newsweek. Archived from the original on 13 August 2023. Retrieved 13 August 2023.
  67. ^ "Medellín sin tugurios: Semana visitó el barrio que levantó Pablo Escobar. Allí todavía lamentan la muerte del capo". 2 December 2023.
  68. ^ "El barrio "Medellín sin tugurios" la herencia de Pablo Escobar que sus habitantes quieren cambiar". 3 February 2021.
  69. ^ "Jairo Ortega, el político paisa que llevó a Pablo Escobar al Congreso". 16 August 2018.
  70. ^ ""Cariño, prepárate para ser la primera dama": Así fue el camino de Pablo Escobar en la política". 28 September 2023.
  71. ^ "Lo que nunca le perdonó Pablo Escobar a Luis Carlos Galán". 18 August 2024.
  72. ^ "Asesinato de Luis Carlos Galán". www.elcolombiano.com.
  73. ^ Bowden 2001, pp. 48–57.
  74. ^ "El día que Felipe González conoció al narco Pablo Escobar". 28 October 2022.
  75. ^ "Cuando Pablo Escobar se coló en la fiesta de González: La noche electoral oculta del 82". 28 October 2022.
  76. ^ "La carrera política de Pablo Escobar: Así fue como el más sanguinario narcotraficante colombiano trató de ser presidente". 26 September 2021.
  77. ^ Guillén, Gonzalo (2 December 2023). "Cuando Pablo Escobar me presentó en Madrid a Felipe González el día que ganó las elecciones". www.lanuevaprensa.com.co.
  78. ^ "Felipe González y el dinero de los cárteles colombianos de la droga". 13 March 2021.
  79. ^ "Iglesias recuerda que Felipe González conoció al 'narco' Pablo Escobar en Madrid". 21 November 2016.
  80. ^ "Se Prendio la Mecha". 19 September 1983.
  81. ^ "Rodrigo Lara: 10 Años". May 1994.
  82. ^ "Muerte a secuestradores MAS: Los orígenes del paramilitarismo". 23 September 2011.
  83. ^ "El MAS, mito fundacional del paramilitarismo". www.comisiondelaverdad.co.
  84. ^ "Perspectivas Internacionales. Ciencia Política y Relaciones Internacionales". revistas.javerianacali.edu.co.
  85. ^ "Los ataques contra Rodrigo Lara Bonilla por enfrentar a Pablo Escobar". 2 December 2018.
  86. ^ "¿Cuál es el origen del enfrentamiento entre Artunduaga y los Lara?". 24 February 2016.
  87. ^ "Este es el artículo de El Espectador que reveló que Pablo Escobar era un narco". elespectador.com (in Spanish). 25 August 2023. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  88. ^ Ehrenfeld, Rachel (1994). Evil Money: the Inside Story of Money Laundering and Corruption in Government, Banks and Business. New York, NY: Shapolsky Publishers, Inc. p. 14. ISBN 1-56171-333-3. Archived from the original on 20 May 2024. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  89. ^ a b c "La sangrienta venganza de Pablo Escobar contra todos los que ayudaron a desenmascararlo". 3 December 2023.
  90. ^ "Así fue desmantelado Tranquilandia, el primer gran laboratorio de droga de Pablo Escobar". 5 October 2023.
  91. ^ Bowden 2001, pp. 63–67.
  92. ^ "Una historia sin contar de Rodrigo Lara Bonilla". March 2016.
  93. ^ Bejarano Guzmán, Ramiro (5 May 2024). "El hombre que dejamos solo". elespectador.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  94. ^ "El presidente Betancur declara la guerra a los traficantes de drogas en Colombia tras el asesinato del ministro de Justicia". El País. 2 May 1984.
  95. ^ "Muerte Anunciada". 4 June 1984.
  96. ^ Alarcón, Óscar (6 July 2021). "Los narcos en Panamá". elespectador.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  97. ^ "La relación de Pablo Escobar y Manuel Antonio Noriega: Desde Panamá negoció un tratado de paz, vio nacer a su hija y tuvo cédula". 10 October 2023.
  98. ^ a b c d e "Escobar: 17 Años de Historia del Criminal". 2 December 1993.
  99. ^ "Carro-Bomba en la Embajada". 31 December 1984.
  100. ^ "Exaliado de Escobar narra presuntos tratos con Cuba y los sandinistas". El Nuevo Siglo.
  101. ^ "Un exaliado de Pablo Escobar narra supuestos negocios con Cuba y los sandinistas". 15 January 2024.
  102. ^ "El juez que se atrevió a señalar a los asesinos de Rodrigo Lara Bonilla". elespectador.com (in Spanish). 2 December 2023. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  103. ^ "Condena en Caso Castro Gil". 17 August 1994.
  104. ^ "Una persona para el país que necesitamos". 16 January 2021.
  105. ^ "Juez que investigó a Pablo Escobar: Piden declarar lesa humanidad". 23 July 2021.
  106. ^ "La toma del Palacio no fue por orden de Pablo Escobar, dicen exmiembros del M-19". elespectador.com (in Spanish). 17 June 2020. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  107. ^ a b "Palacio de Justicia: 35 años de ignominia". 4 November 2020.
  108. ^ "A 30 años de las "28 horas de terror": Así fue la toma del Palacio de Justicia en Colombia". 5 November 2015.
  109. ^ "La mano de la mafia en Budapest". elespectador.com. 2 August 2012.
  110. ^ "Barry Seal, el piloto norteamericano que reveló los negocios de Pablo Escobar en Nicaragua". 17 October 2023.
  111. ^ "Barry Seal, el piloto que trabajó para la CIA, fue narcotraficante e informante de la DEA y murió asesinado por orden de Pablo Escobar". 11 April 2022.
  112. ^ "Barry Seal, el piloto traficante que creyó ser más inteligente que el Cartel de Medellín". 16 February 2019.
  113. ^ "Indemnizan a Familia de Baquero Borda". 16 February 1996.
  114. ^ Escobar Moreno, David (13 April 2020). "Hernando Baquero, un magistrado en el olvido". elespectador.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  115. ^ "Cruel Despedida". September 1986.
  116. ^ Camacho, Roberto J. (19 July 2010). "El homicidio de Roberto Camacho". elespectador.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  117. ^ "Enfant Terrible, Sección Economía, edición 225, Sep 22 1986". 22 September 1986.
  118. ^ "Frustran Fuga Masiva en la Picota". 21 September 1990.
  119. ^ "Fundación para la Libertad de Prensa". flip.org.co.
  120. ^ "Visionarios". El Nuevo Siglo.
  121. ^ "En la Impunidad, Crímenes de Periodistas". 22 March 1997.
  122. ^ "Asesinato del juez Zuluaga, el primero que pidió captura de Escobar". www.elcolombiano.com.
  123. ^ "Asesinado magistrado de Medellín". elespectador.com (in Spanish). 23 May 2012. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  124. ^ "¿Quien Mato al Coronel Ramirez?". 13 April 1987.
  125. ^ "Así recuerda su familia al coronel Jaime Ramírez, quien combatió como ninguno al narcotráfico". 3 December 2018.
  126. ^ "El héroe de la Policía Antinarcóticos". elespectador.com (in Spanish). 24 July 2012. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  127. ^ "Así fue el homicidio de Guillermo Cano por el cual el Gobierno Petro pidió perdón en nombre del Estado". 9 February 2024.
  128. ^ Cardona, Jorge (9 February 2024). "Cronología de un crimen sin respuesta: todo sobre el asesinato de Guillermo Cano". elespectador.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  129. ^ "El Estado pide perdón a la familia de Guillermo Cano por no haber garantizado su vida". 9 February 2024.
  130. ^ Rodríguez, Rodolfo (27 July 2012). ""Don Guillermo Cano murió en mis brazos"". elespectador.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  131. ^ "Atentado contra exministro Enrique Parejo es delito de lesa humanidad". 4 April 2019.
  132. ^ "Declaran delito de lesa humanidad el atentado contra el exministro Enrique Parejo". 4 April 2019.
  133. ^ "Declaran como crimen de lesa humanidad atentado a Enrique Parejo". www.radionacional.co.
  134. ^ Parejo a pruebas de balas | #LosInformantes | El exministro de Justicia y embajador de Colombia en Budapest, Enrique Parejo, narra los detalles de su atentado cuando un sicario de... | By Los Informantes | Facebook. Retrieved 22 November 2024 – via www.facebook.com.
  135. ^ "La 'mafia' de la droga atenta contra un embajador colombiano". El País. 14 January 1987.
  136. ^ "Atentado contra exministro Enrique Parejo, declarado de lesa humanidad". 4 April 2019.
  137. ^ "Atentado contra Enrique Parejo es ahora un delito de lesa humanidad". 5 April 2019.
  138. ^ "Cali Colombia Nacional Pablo Escobar financió la toma del Palacio de Justicia Escobar financió toma del Palacio de Justicia". El Pais. Archived from the original on 24 October 2015. Retrieved 12 September 2015.
  139. ^ Bowden 2001, pp. 82–85.
  140. ^ "La traición de Pablo Escobar y la financiación de un candidato presidencial: Qué es verdad y qué está en duda de las afirmaciones de Carlos Lehder". 15 January 2024.
  141. ^ "Traición y condena: Carlos Lehder reveló cómo fue que terminó en una cárcel en EE. UU. Por culpa de Pablo Escobar". 14 January 2024.
  142. ^ "Carlos Lehder se refirió al odio de Pablo Escobar por Rodrigo Lara, a quien ordenó asesinar: "Era alérgico a que se pronunciara su nombre"". 16 January 2024.
  143. ^ "Carlos Lehder y Pablo Escobar: Así fue la traición del Cartel". 14 January 2024.
  144. ^ "TIME Magazine Cover: Inside the Cocaine Business – July 1, 1991". TIME.com.
  145. ^ "Capturados en España y absueltos en Colombia". elespectador.com (in Spanish). 10 April 2020. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  146. ^ "A Punto de Ser Extraditado DOS Veces". 16 January 1991.
  147. ^ "Cero y Van Dos, Sección Nación, edición 290, Dec 21 1987". 21 December 1987.
  148. ^ "Nación Pierde Pleito Por Libertad de Ochoa". 21 February 1994.
  149. ^ "Dos de los jefes mafiosos colombianos detenidos querían 'blanquear' sus ingresos en España, según la policía". El País. 23 November 1984.
  150. ^ Daniel Vivas Barandica (22 August 2014). "Entrevista de la edición 16 de BOCAS con John Jairo Velásquez Vásquez, 'Popeye', desde la cárcel" [Interview of the 16th edition of BOCAS with John Jairo Velásquez Vásquez, 'Popeye', from prison]. El Tiempo (in Spanish).
  151. ^ "El Que Falta, Sección Nación, edición 693, Sep 11 1995". 11 September 1995.
  152. ^ "¿Quien Fue?". 15 February 1988.
  153. ^ "El día en que el Cartel de Cali intentó matar a toda la familia de Pablo Escobar". Meganoticias. 10 September 2020. Archived from the original on 30 July 2021. Retrieved 24 October 2024.
  154. ^ "Edificio Mónaco". El Colombiano. Retrieved 24 October 2024.
  155. ^ "El primer carrobomba de Colombia explotó un día como hoy, 13 de enero, en 1988 en Medellín". YouTube. Vita TV Producciones. 13 January 2024. Retrieved 24 October 2024.
  156. ^ "VUELVE y JUEGA, Sección Especiales, edición 439, Oct 29 1990". 29 October 1990.
  157. ^ "Un recorrido por las entrañas del edificio Mónaco, de Pablo Escobar". 29 July 2018.
  158. ^ "Pablo Escobar: La historia de la bomba en el edificio Mónaco que desató una guerra". December 2023.
  159. ^ "Drogas la Rebaja: La cadena de farmacias con la que se lavaba dinero del narcotráfico y que ahora es parte del Estado en Colombia". 12 June 2023.
  160. ^ "La guerra entre carteles y la oscura historia de Drogas la Rebaja, cadena de farmacias que apoyará reforma a la salud". 13 June 2023.
  161. ^ "Drogas la Rebaja, el negocio que se inventaron los narcos más asesinos de Colombia". 29 April 2022.
  162. ^ "Los de Cali Tenian Pinchado a Escobar". 5 June 1995.
  163. ^ "Estupor Por la Masacre". 27 September 1990.
  164. ^ "En Cali aún hay cicatrices de la guerra entre carteles del narcotráfico". December 2013.
  165. ^ "El capo que Pablo Escobar no pudo matar: La guerra de Gilberto y Miguel Rodríguez Orejuela contra el líder del cartel de Medellín". June 2022.
  166. ^ "Low Murtra y la ingratitud del Estado". Portafolio.co.
  167. ^ "Enviaron Carta a Juan Gómez Martínez Periodistas Han Recibido Buen Trato: Extraditables". 7 November 1990.
  168. ^ Argos, Lucía (18 January 1990). "Juan Gómez Martínez". El País.
  169. ^ "Andrés Pastrana, quinto expresidente que hablará con la Comisión de la Verdad". web.comisiondelaverdad.co.
  170. ^ "Hace 20 años secuestraron a Pastrana" (in Spanish). 18 March 2020. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  171. ^ "El Reto de la Mafia". 22 February 1988.
  172. ^ Lozano, Pilar (20 January 1988). "Conmoción en Colombia por el secuestro de Andrés Pastrana". El País.
  173. ^ "Andrés Pastrana, el periodista secuestrado que llegó a la presidencia". 27 October 2023.
  174. ^ "Ustedes Se van y Matan al Procurador". 27 March 1995.
  175. ^ "Otro vil crimen de Pablo Escobar: Carlos Mauro Hoyos, el procurador que se convirtió en mártir". 30 November 2023.
  176. ^ "Casillero de Letras – Asesinado el Procurador General de la Nación". 25 January 2013.
  177. ^ "Disparaban Como Locos: Policía". 6 September 1990.
  178. ^ "El Gran Escape, Sección Nación, edición 308, Apr 25 1988". 25 April 1988.
  179. ^ "La Quinta Evasión de Pablo Escobar". 14 October 1993.
  180. ^ "La Ruta de Pablo Escobar en Medellín". 6 January 2021.
  181. ^ "Los intentos políticos de Escobar por negociar su guerra". elespectador.com (in Spanish). 4 October 2012. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  182. ^ "Fundación para la Libertad de Prensa". flip.org.co.
  183. ^ Donadio, Alberto (12 April 2020). "El legado de Héctor Giraldo". elespectador.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  184. ^ "Pablo Escobar Fue Dejando a Su Paso Un Rosario de Muerte y Terror". 20 June 1991.
  185. ^ Juristas, Comisión Colombiana de. "Comisión Colombiana de Juristas – CCJ>". COLJURISTAS.ORG.
  186. ^ Osorio Granados, Marcela (3 May 2019). "Álvaro González Santana: la memoria de un abogado inerme". elespectador.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  187. ^ "30 de mayo de 1989: El primer carro bomba contra Maza y la extraña cadena de implicaciones". 30 May 2017.
  188. ^ "Por el Asesinato de Antonio Roldán Betancur Sólo Hay Un Condenad". 5 July 1995.
  189. ^ "Asesinato de Roldán: Alianza de Carteles". 22 September 1991.
  190. ^ "Asesinato de Antonio Roldán Betancur, carrobomba en Medellín, Cartel de Cal: Hace 30 años asesinaron al gobernador Antonio Roldán Betancur". caracol.com.co. 4 July 2019. Archived from the original on 24 February 2020.
  191. ^ "Asesinato de la jueza María Elena Díaz". www.elcolombiano.com.
  192. ^ "Posible ejecución extrajudicial COLOMBIA: Dra. María Elena DIAZ PEREZ, de 38 años, jueza" (PDF). www.amnesty.org.
  193. ^ "Magistrada Se Defiende a Balazos". 11 December 1990.
  194. ^ "Muere una juez colombiana". El País. 29 July 1989.
  195. ^ "La lección del caso Galán". 6 June 2009.
  196. ^ Gutiérrez Yepes, Andrea Catalina (11 December 2019). "Dos veces sepultado : Vida, muerte y olvido del magistrado Carlos Ernesto Valencia García".
  197. ^ "John Jairo Velásquez Vásquez, alias 'Popeye', relata la manera como se planeó el atentado contra el lider político Luis Carlos Galán". www.wradio.com.co. Archived from the original on 8 April 2012.
  198. ^ "Primera Página 1989". 20 December 1999.
  199. ^ a b c "Decreto 1863 de 1989". www.suin-juriscol.gov.co.
  200. ^ "Decreto-Ley 1856 de 18 de Agosto de 1989 Diario Oficial No. 38.945 de 18 de agosto de 1989". www.nuevalegislacion.com.
  201. ^ "Decreto 1856 de 1989 (Agosto 18)". publicaciones.eafit.edu.co.
  202. ^ "1989: Por qué hace 30 años Colombia vivió el peor año de su historia reciente". BBC News Mundo.
  203. ^ "Casillero de Letras – Paralizada la justicia en Antioquia". 4 November 2014.
  204. ^ "Gunmen murder Medellin judge who headed drug probe – UPI Archives". UPI.
  205. ^ Treaster, Joseph B. (4 November 1989). "Colombia Judges and Their Aides Go on Strike to Demand Protection". The New York Times.
  206. ^ Lozano, Pilar (3 November 1989). "Asesinados un diputado y una magistrada en Colombia por los narcotraficantes". El País.
  207. ^ "Víctimas de 'Popeye', divididas por su libertad". 27 August 2014.
  208. ^ "Asesinada la magistrada Mariela EspinosaSin título". Museo Casa de la Memoria.
  209. ^ "El Cerco". 25 December 1989.
  210. ^ "Pasadizos Secretos de Pablo Escobar". August 1993.
  211. ^ Bowden 2001, pp. 93–94.
  212. ^ "25 years on, Colombia still mourns Escobar plane bombing, still wants answers". The Japan Times. 8 July 2016. Archived from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  213. ^ "El Misterio, Sección Especiales, edición 396, Jan 1 1990". January 1990.
  214. ^ "El atentado más sangriento de Escobar: 500 kilos de dinamita, 63 muertos y 700 heridos para matar a su enemigo". 6 December 2022.
  215. ^ "Atentado al edificio del DAS". www.elcolombiano.com.
  216. ^ "El Coletazo, Sección Nación, edición 397, Jan 8 1990". 8 January 1990.
  217. ^ "El Fin de 'El Mexicano'". www.semana.com. 8 June 1992. Retrieved 26 January 2017.
  218. ^ ""El Mexicano": El despiadado narco que festejaba con mariachis y se unió a Pablo Escobar". 15 May 2019.
  219. ^ "Los intentos políticos de Escobar por negociar su guerra". elespectador.com (in Spanish). 4 October 2012. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  220. ^ "Decisiones fatales". 12 May 2003.
  221. ^ "El Tiempo – Recherche d'archives de Google Actualités". news.google.com. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  222. ^ "¿Quién mató a Jaramillo Ossa? Nota de archivo". 23 April 1990.
  223. ^ "Quién mató a Pizarro, Articulo Impreso Archivado". Archived from the original on 26 April 2010.
  224. ^ "Las Víctimas del Terrorismo". 3 December 2003.
  225. ^ Lozano, Pilar (26 May 1990). "30 muertos en una noche de terror en Medellín". El País.
  226. ^ "Casillero de Letras – Asesinado Federico Estrada Vélez". 22 May 2015.
  227. ^ "Condenan al Tití Por Asesinato de Senador Federico Estrada". March 1995.
  228. ^ "Golpe al sicariato". Semana (in Spanish). 15 July 1990. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  229. ^ "De Pinina a el León". 13 August 1990.
  230. ^ "El Derrumbe del Cartel de Medellín". 2 December 1993.
  231. ^ "La masacre de Oporto: Un hecho que se divide entre Pablo Escobar y el Bloque de Búsqueda". 30 October 2024.
  232. ^ "Oporto, la masacre más sangrienta y la más olvidada". December 2018.
  233. ^ "La masacre del bar Oporto y los hechos de un fin de semana escabroso".
  234. ^ Alirio Calle, Luis. "Bar Oporto 1990: El saturado recuerdo del pavor" (PDF). unrelatode.telemedellin.tv.
  235. ^ "El escalofriante relato del hombre que sobrevivió a masacre en Medellín". 31 May 2022.
  236. ^ "Masacre en Medellín: "Estaba al lado de 19 cadáveres y con nueve tiros en el cuerpo", cómo sobreviví a una matanza en la ciudad más peligrosa del mundo". BBC News Mundo.
  237. ^ "Pablo Escobar: La poco conocida historia del mercenario escocés contratado para matar al líder del cartel de Medellín". BBC News Mundo.
  238. ^ "Álvaro Ortega, el árbitro asesinado por Pablo Escobar". 15 November 2016.
  239. ^ "Balazos advertidos al fútbol colombiano". elespectador.com (in Spanish). 15 April 2020. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  240. ^ "A 30 años: Cuando el fútbol se congeló por el asesinato de un árbitro". 14 November 2019.
  241. ^ "Tyson Planeó el Ataque". 28 September 1990.
  242. ^ "Ministerio Público". www.mp.gob.gt. 21 February 2014. Archived from the original on 27 May 2022.
  243. ^ "Masacre: 27 Muertos". 26 September 1990.
  244. ^ "Análisis epistolares en torno a una masacre". Plaza Pública.
  245. ^ "Abolido Límite Para Acogerse a Beneficios de No Extradición". 30 January 1991.
  246. ^ "Muerto Subjefe del Cartel de Medellín". 12 August 1990.
  247. ^ "Asesinado Un Primo de Pablo Escobar". 25 January 1994.
  248. ^ "Política de Sometimiento Institucionalizó el Caos". 12 January 1995.
  249. ^ Salazar, Sania (14 October 2017). ""Ya tuvimos un sometimiento a la justicia en los 90 y no salió bien"". colombiacheck.com.
  250. ^ "Decreto 3030 de 1990". www.suin-juriscol.gov.co.
  251. ^ "Lento Proceso a los Hermanos Ochoa". 18 December 1991.
  252. ^ "Los hermanos socios de Pablo Escobar". elespectador.com (in Spanish). 19 March 2020. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  253. ^ "Secuestrado Ayer Francisco Santos". 20 September 1990.
  254. ^ a b "Maruja Pachón de Villamizar: ¿quién es y cómo fue su secuestro, que duró 7 meses?". 5 January 2024.
  255. ^ "Los secuestros con que Pablo Escobar buscó liberarse de la extradición y atemorizar a Colombia". 29 May 2021.
  256. ^ "Asesinado Low Murtra". May 1991.
  257. ^ "Por Qué Low Murtra". 2 May 1991.
  258. ^ "Enrique Low Murtra, el jurista acribillado por su admirable ética". 30 April 2021.
  259. ^ "El asesinato del ex ministro Enrique Low Murtra". Cronica del Quindio. 10 December 2013.
  260. ^ Lozano, Pilar (2 May 1991). "Asesinado en Bogotá el ex ministro de Justicia Enrique Low Murtra". El País.
  261. ^ "Los conmovedores testimonios de la mamá de Diana Turbay y de su hija en Expediente Final". 25 February 2024.
  262. ^ Morales Sierra, Felipe (24 January 2021). "30 años sin Diana Turbay, la periodista que callaron los extraditables". elespectador.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  263. ^ "Hace 30 años fue asesinada la periodista Diana Turbay". 25 January 2021.
  264. ^ "Muerte de Diana Turbay y Carlos Hoyos siguen impunes décadas después". 24 January 2019.
  265. ^ Lozano, Pilar (27 January 1991). "La muerte de Diana Turbay, duro revés en la lucha contra los 'narcos' colombianos". El País.
  266. ^ Cúcuta, La Opinión. "26 años del rescate y muerte de la periodista Diana Turbay". Noticias de Norte de Santander, Colombia y el mundo.
  267. ^ "Tres décadas del asesinato de Diana Turbay Quintero". 25 January 2021.
  268. ^ "Los Misterios del Caso Diana Turbay". 11 March 1991.
  269. ^ "El Secuestro, de la Mano de la Muerte". 20 January 1992.
  270. ^ "Una despedida a Diana Turbay". 2 August 2014.
  271. ^ "30 años del asesinato de Diana Turbay". 25 January 2021.
  272. ^ "Muerte de Diana Turbay: Cargos a Cinco Oficiales". 8 May 1991.
  273. ^ "Muerte de Diana Turbay. Declaran DOS Generales". 31 July 1991.
  274. ^ "Diana, la Gran Ausente". 21 May 1991.
  275. ^ "Investigadores Tocan a las Puertas de Palacio". 18 February 1991.
  276. ^ a b "La historia del cura García Herreros, el único que logró meter en una cárcel a Pablo Escobar". 17 October 2020.
  277. ^ "Mensaje de García Herreros a Escobar G". 19 April 1991.
  278. ^ "La increíble cárcel que Pablo Escobar hizo construir a su medida: Lujo, orgías y visitas famosas". 21 June 2023.
  279. ^ "Francisco Santos, 8 Meses Secuestrado". 19 May 1991.
  280. ^ "Francisco Santos recordó su secuestro, la carta "perfecta" de Pablo Escobar y la "herida que está ahí"". 18 September 2024.
  281. ^ "Libre Maruja Pachón". 21 May 1991.
  282. ^ "Mensaje de Francisco Santos al Presidente Liberar Periodistas Sin Violar las Leyes". 30 November 1990.
  283. ^ "Cayó Presunto Secuestrador de Maruja P. De Villamizar". 4 November 1993.
  284. ^ "El Pastor y La Oveja Negra, Sección Nación, edición 472, Jun 17 1991". 17 June 1991.
  285. ^ a b c d "La historia no contada del día en que se entregó Pablo Escobar". 19 June 2021.
  286. ^ "El padre que quería llevar al cielo a Pablo Escobar". 20 September 2021.
  287. ^ Jiménez, Édgar (2 December 2023). "Y a mí me tocó contarle al mundo la farsa de Pablo Escobar". cambiocolombia.com.
  288. ^ "Itinerario de la Primera Entrega de Pablo Escobar". 29 July 1992.
  289. ^ "Constitucional el Decreto 2047: La Corte Vía Libre al Decreto de la Autoconfesión". 27 October 1990.
  290. ^ "DECRETO 2047 DE 1990" (PDF). historico.presidencia.gov.co. 5 September 1990.
  291. ^ "Decreto 2047 De 1990". www.suin-juriscol.gov.co.
  292. ^ "Decreto 2147 De 1990". www.suin-juriscol.gov.co.
  293. ^ "Decreto 2147 De 1990" (PDF). historico.presidencia.gov.co.
  294. ^ "Decreto 2372 De 1990". www.suin-juriscol.gov.co.
  295. ^ "Decreto 2372 De 1990". historico.presidencia.gov.co.
  296. ^ "Decreto 303 De 1991". www.suin-juriscol.gov.co.
  297. ^ "Decreto 3030 De 1990" (PDF). historico.presidencia.gov.co.
  298. ^ "Lo Hago Por la Paz de Colombia". 21 June 1991.
  299. ^ a b "Celda cinco estrellas, reinas de belleza y orgías: La vida de Pablo Escobar en la cárcel que mandó a construir". 16 July 2022.
  300. ^ "Pablo Escobar: Escape de la Catedral". Spotify.
  301. ^ "La única buena obra de Pablo Escobar". 6 August 2012.
  302. ^ "La Catedral: Cómo era la lujosa cárcel que Pablo Escobar mandó a construir". 4 October 2023.
  303. ^ "El día que la selección Colombia fue engañada y terminó visitando al cartel de Cali". September 2023.
  304. ^ "Goles en contra: Atlético Nacional de Medellín, ¿realmente jugó un partido contra el equipo de Pablo Escobar en la Catedral? | Serie de Netflix nnda NNLT | MAG". 11 November 2022.
  305. ^ "Las reinas de belleza que habrían pasado por la cárcel de Pablo Escobar". 9 September 2023.
  306. ^ "La Catedral de Pablo Escobar: El lunar en la vida de Fernando Carrillo". 20 October 2016.
  307. ^ "La Muerte de Henry Pérez". 25 July 1991.
  308. ^ "Asesinado Jefe de Autodefensas". 21 July 1991.
  309. ^ "Henry Pérez, el enemigo de Pablo Escobar (Semana)". 26 September 2008.
  310. ^ "Asesinato de Gonzalo y de Henry de Jesús Pérez". 16 January 1980.
  311. ^ "La cacería de Pablo Escobar: Exagente de la DEA reveló detalles de su alianza con los paramilitares". February 2024.
  312. ^ "Pista Falsa (Narcotráfico)". 27 December 1993.
  313. ^ "¿Conversacion en la Catedral?". 10 August 1992.
  314. ^ "Escobar: La Hora Final". 27 February 1993.
  315. ^ "Cada Uno de Esos Cadáveres Vale 10 Millones de Dólares". 20 July 1993.
  316. ^ "La decisión de Pablo Escobar que creó a "Los Pepes", el grupo que ayudó en la búsqueda del temido líder del cartel de Medellín". 30 August 2023.
  317. ^ "Escobar Tiene Ahora Nuevos Enemigos". 24 July 1992.
  318. ^ "'Don Berna', Diego Fernando Murillo Bejarano". 7 January 2009.
  319. ^ "La historia de los Pepes, el grupo armado ilegal que ayudó a matar a Pablo Escobar". 4 November 2018.
  320. ^ Bautista, Daniel (23 January 2024). "¿Quiénes eran 'Los Pepes', el grupo bautizado por Hugo Aguilar para matar a Pablo Escobar?". redmas.com.co.
  321. ^ "Hallan Un Cadáver en Cárcel de la Catedral". 25 November 1993.
  322. ^ "La nueva identidad del nieto de un expresidente ligado al cartel". 23 November 2013.
  323. ^ "Aparece Sobreviviente de Matanza de la Catedral". 9 March 1993.
  324. ^ "De cazador a cazado, Sección Nación, edición 1126, Nov 30 2003". 30 November 2003.
  325. ^ Ariza, Gustavo Pardo (14 November 2016). Cogobierno desde la Catedral: Verdadera historia de la fuga de Pablo Escobar de la cárcel-hotel. Gustavo Pardo Ariza. ISBN 978-1-5403-8317-4.
  326. ^ "Pardo Ariza No Cumplió Órdenes". 9 October 1992.
  327. ^ "La Catedral: Cómo era la lujosa cárcel que Pablo Escobar mandó a construir". 4 October 2023.
  328. ^ "Fiscal Entregó Declaración Sobre Hechos de la Catedral". 15 September 1992.
  329. ^ "La Catedral de Pablo Escobar: El plan – Testigo Directo". YouTube. 9 March 2010.
  330. ^ "Emplazan a Escobar, A Arete y a Chopo". 18 December 1992.
  331. ^ ""Soy el Unico Testigo Contra Pablo Escobar"". 12 October 1992.
  332. ^ "La Catedral: Sigue el Remezón". 29 July 1992.
  333. ^ "El nuevo lío de Eduardo Mendoza, acusado ahora por las chuzadas a los pilotos de Avianca". 16 May 2019.
  334. ^ "Hace 30 años Pablo Escobar se entregaba al Gobierno colombiano". 19 June 2021.
  335. ^ Treaster, Joseph B. (23 July 1992). "Colombian Drug Baron Escapes Luxurious Prison After Gunfight". The New York Times. p. 1. Archived from the original on 2 May 2013. Retrieved 21 July 2011.
  336. ^ Ross, Timothy (24 July 1992). "Escobar escape humiliates Colombian leaders". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 7 February 2017 – via www.theguardian.com.
  337. ^ "La Catedral: Toma, Paso a Paso". 28 July 1992.
  338. ^ "La fuga de la Catedral: Cómo escapó Pablo Escobar de la prisión donde asesinaba a sus enemigos". El Comercio. 22 July 2022.
  339. ^ "Secretos de la retoma y fotos inéditas de la Catedral". December 2018.
  340. ^ Lozano, Pilar (23 July 1992). "El 'narco' Pablo Escobar se fuga de la cárcel tras encabezar un motín". El País.
  341. ^ "El día que Pablo Escobar se fugó de la cárcel pateando un muro". 22 July 2018.
  342. ^ "Recordando la fuga de Pablo Escobar de la Catedral". 13 July 2015.
  343. ^ "Esperando a Escobar". 9 November 1992.
  344. ^ "Fuga de Pablo Escobar: 28 años de la peor burla al país". 16 September 2020.
  345. ^ "El Bloque de Búsqueda". www.comisiondelaverdad.co.
  346. ^ "Bloque de búsqueda, ¿qué hacían? ¿A quien perseguía? Serie Canal RCN". 6 December 2022.
  347. ^ "El Bloque de Búsqueda, Personaje 93". 31 December 1993.
  348. ^ "Pacto con el diablo, Sección Nación, edición 1346, Feb 16 2008". 16 February 2008.
  349. ^ "Alianza de policías y militares con "Los Pepes" para capturar a Pablo Escobar: Esto dijo el entonces presidente César Gaviria". 31 January 2024.
  350. ^ "Así habría sido la macabra alianza entre el Estado y los llamados 'Pepes' en la guerra contra Pablo Escobar, según la confesión del coronel (R) Aguilar". 27 January 2024.
  351. ^ "Asesinada Una Jueza Sin Rostro". 19 September 1992.
  352. ^ "Los Días de Miryam Rocío". 27 September 1992.
  353. ^ "Regreso al Terror". 19 October 1992.
  354. ^ "Dinamitan Casa de Jefe de Inteligencia". 20 December 1992.
  355. ^ "Hijo de Escobar Habría Actuado en Un Asesinato". 8 March 1993.
  356. ^ "Captores Mataron a Lisandro Ospina B". 31 March 1993.
  357. ^ "DOS Capturas Para Escobar". 14 April 1993.
  358. ^ "Historia de Otras Bombas". 12 November 1999.
  359. ^ "Se entregan tres lugartenientes del 'narco' colombiano Pablo Escobar". El País. 9 October 1992.
  360. ^ "Ningún Delito Confesaron Osito , Popeye y Otto". 10 October 1992.
  361. ^ "Esperando a Escobar". 9 November 1992.
  362. ^ "Escobar: Inminente Entrega". 9 October 1992.
  363. ^ "¿Quiénes son los Pepes?". 29 March 1993.
  364. ^ "Reflexión Sobre los Pepes". 27 February 1993.
  365. ^ "Carta a los Pepes de Pablo Escobar". 2 December 1993.
  366. ^ "Revelaciones del bajo mundo – "Los Pepes", un horror que sigue en la impunidad". 2 December 2013.
  367. ^ "Fidel Castaño "Yo fui el creador de los pepes": Revelaciones a Revista SEMANA". 27 June 1994.
  368. ^ "Muertos Ayer Cuatro De Los Pepes- Archivo Digital de Noticias de Colombia y el Mundo desde 1.990". www.eltiempo.com. 4 February 1993. Archived from the original on 11 June 2017.
  369. ^ "La historia de los Pepes, el grupo armado ilegal que ayudó a matar a Pablo Escobar". 4 November 2018.
  370. ^ "Así fue la bomba de la 93, el atentado en la calle más glamurosa de Bogotá hace 31 años". 15 April 2024.
  371. ^ "¿Por Qué La Industria Cambia?". revista.fasecolda.com.
  372. ^ "Rendirán homenaje a las víctimas de atentado al Centro de la 93". elespectador.com (in Spanish). 15 April 2016. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  373. ^ "Una Bomba Anunciada". 18 April 1993.
  374. ^ "Asesinan al Abogado Guido Parra y a Su Hijo". 17 April 1993.
  375. ^ "Asesinan Otro Abogado del Fallecido Capo Pablo Escobar". 22 January 1999.
  376. ^ "Hallan Armas en Finca de la Familia Parra M". 18 April 1993.
  377. ^ "El abogado del diablo: Defendió a Pablo Escobar y tuvo que rogar por TV para que no lo mataran". 4 December 2023.
  378. ^ "Así fue la muerte de Pablo Escobar, según los agentes que lo acorralaron". 14 November 2020.
  379. ^ "Cayó Anoche el Último Hombre de Escobar". 7 October 1993.
  380. ^ a b "Hijos de Escobar Huyen de los Pepes". 19 February 1993.
  381. ^ "Carta-Bomba Hiere a Osito". 19 December 1993.
  382. ^ "El Osito le Propone Paz a Sus Enemigos". 3 January 1994.
  383. ^ "El Exodo de los Familiares de Pablo Escobar y Osito". 29 June 1993.
  384. ^ a b "Los Escobar a Alemania". 28 November 1993.
  385. ^ García, Maria Isabel (29 November 1993). "Alemania impide a la familia de Pablo Escobar la entrada en el país". El País.
  386. ^ a b "El vuelo a Alemania que provocó la muerte de Pablo Escobar". 27 January 2019.
  387. ^ a b "Regresó la Familia de Escobar". 30 November 1993.
  388. ^ "El Hotel Tequendama, el lugar en Bogotá que marcó la caída de Pablo Escobar". 3 August 2023.
  389. ^ "La negociación de la viuda de Pablo Escobar con el cartel de Cali y cómo su riqueza siguió alimentando el narcotráfico". 3 December 2023.
  390. ^ "La Familia de Escobar Salió en Enero del País". 23 February 1995.
  391. ^ "Recorriendo los escenarios de Pablo Escobar | Colombia | elmundo.es". www.elmundo.es.
  392. ^ "Pablo Escobar: Operación que dio de baja al capo en 1993". 2 December 2016.
  393. ^ "Escobar, Más Lejos Que Nunca". 20 September 1992.
  394. ^ "La otra guerra de Pablo Escobar". 20 February 2012.
  395. ^ "Ser el contador de la guerrilla: El último sueño de Escobar". 21 January 2021.
  396. ^ a b "El último cumpleaños de Pablo Escobar". 12 December 2021.
  397. ^ "La última noche de Pablo Escobar: La prima del 'capo' reveló detalles". 4 December 2023.
  398. ^ "Humillado, acorralado y deprimido: Así pasó su último cumpleaños Pablo Escobar". December 2021.
  399. ^ "El último día de Pablo Escobar". www.eltiempo.com. 3 December 2012. Archived from the original on 7 December 2013.
  400. ^ "Escobar Murió de Siete Balazos". 3 December 1993.
  401. ^ "Muere en un techo en Medellín el capo más buscado del mundo". 5 December 2016.
  402. ^ "Al Fin Cayo!". 3 December 1993.
  403. ^ "El Limón Pagaba Sobornos del Cartel". 3 December 1993.
  404. ^ "Pablo Escobar Gaviria, abatido hace 30 años: Así cayó, contado en su máximo detalle, aquel 2 de diciembre de 1993". December 2023.
  405. ^ "Hijo de Pablo Escobar cree que su padre se suicidó". Archived from the original on 6 December 2013.
  406. ^ "'El Patrón' no ha muerto". La Opinión. Archived from the original on 5 February 2015.
  407. ^ "Pablo Escobar y las teorías sobre su muerte: ¿se suicidó o lo mataron?". 2 December 2023.
  408. ^ "La auténtica muerte de Pablo Escobar, ¿se suicidó el sanguinario Zar de la cocaína?". 19 October 2016.
  409. ^ "Pablo Escobar: Cómo murió hace 30 años y 3 de las teorías sobre quién le disparó". 2 December 2018.
  410. ^ Sánchez Cristo, Julio (27 November 2023). ""Pablo Escobar se suicidó, no lo mataron", hijo del excapo del cartel de Medellín". cambiocolombia.com.
  411. ^ "Pablo Escobar Gaviria: ¿El capo narco murió asesinado o se suicidó?". 2 December 2019.
  412. ^ "La muerte de Pablo Escobar: ¿suicidio o ejecución?". 3 April 2018.
  413. ^ "Pablo Escobar: Cómo murió hace 28 años y 3 de las teorías sobre quién le disparó". 2 December 2021.
  414. ^ "Pablo Escobar: Su último día y otros datos alrededor de su muerte". 2 December 2021.
  415. ^ a b "Los Pepes, clave en muerte de Escobar". 31 December 1899.
  416. ^ "¿Quién mató a Pablo Escobar? Suicidio, los Pepes o el Bloque de Búsqueda". 4 December 2023.
  417. ^ "Hugo Aguilar, el coronel que dio de baja a Pablo Escobar, pero terminó trabajando con los paramilitares". 25 January 2024.
  418. ^ "Hugo Aguilar: El 'héroe' que terminó salpicado por los 'paras'". 5 July 2011.
  419. ^ "Hugo Heliodoro Aguilar Naranjo". 12 February 2021.
  420. ^ "Hugo Aguilar aceptó en la JEP haber recibido apoyo de las AUC para ser gobernador". elespectador.com (in Spanish). 23 January 2024. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  421. ^ ""A Pablo Escobar lo mató Carlos Castaño"". elespectador.com. 18 June 2011. Archived from the original on 21 June 2011.
  422. ^ "Carlos Castaño fue quien mató a Pablo Escobar, no la Policía, dice ex paramilitar". 6 November 2008.
  423. ^ "Enfoque Internacional – A veinte años de la muerte de Pablo Escobar". 2 December 2013.
  424. ^ Wallace, Arturo (2 December 2013). "Drug boss Pablo Escobar still divides Colombia". BBC News. Archived from the original on 14 August 2017. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  425. ^ "Colombian Attorney General on Virginia Vallejo's offer to testify against Santofimio" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 March 2011.
  426. ^ "Back to jail for Colombia ex-minister". Independent Online. Bogotá. 1 September 2011. Archived from the original on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  427. ^ "Virginia Vallejo takes refuge in United States". Virginia Vallejo. Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. reprinted and translated from Gonzalo Guillen (16 July 2006). "Virginia Vallejo". El Nuevo Herald.
  428. ^ "Pablo Escobar's Ex-Lover Flees Colombia". Fox News Channel. Archived from the original on 17 January 2018. Retrieved 1 April 2009.
  429. ^ "Testimony of Virginia Vallejo in 2006". Archived from the original on 11 September 2015. Retrieved 21 September 2018.
  430. ^ "Radio Nizkor: Colombia". www.radionizkor.org. Archived from the original on 22 December 2018. Retrieved 21 September 2018.
  431. ^ "Virginia Vallejo testificó en el caso Palacio de Justicia". Caracol Radio. 27 August 2008. Archived from the original on 14 February 2012. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  432. ^ Michael Evans (17 December 2009). "Truth Commission Blames Colombian State for Palace of Justice Tragedy". Unredacted. Archived from the original on 5 May 2011. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  433. ^ "Colombia ex-officer jailed after historic conviction". BBC News. 10 June 2010. Archived from the original on 11 April 2019. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  434. ^ "Colombian 1985 Supreme Court raid commander sentenced". BBC News. 29 April 2011. Archived from the original on 10 April 2019. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  435. ^ "Galan Slaying a State Crime, Colombian Prosecutors Say". Latin American Herald Tribune. Archived from the original on 9 August 2018. Retrieved 17 November 2009.
  436. ^ Romero, Simon (3 October 2007). "Colombian Leader Disputes Claim of Tie to Cocaine Kingpin". The New York Times. p. 1. Archived from the original on 9 August 2018. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  437. ^ hermana, Oiga Hermano. "Documentos de la historia del M-19: De Pie Colombia". El blog de Oiga Hermano, hermana.
  438. ^ "Las cinco incógnitas que permanecen luego de 35 años de la toma del Palacio de Justicia". 6 November 2020.
  439. ^ "Drug lord's wife and son arrested". BBC News. 17 November 1999. Archived from the original on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 13 February 2010.
  440. ^ Escobar 2014, p. 466.
  441. ^ Escobar 2014, pp. 468–495.
  442. ^ "Ee.uu. Canceló Visas a Parientes de Escobar". 27 July 1993.
  443. ^ García, Maria Isabel (20 February 1993). "La policía de Colombia impide salir del país a dos hijos del 'narco' Escobar". El País.
  444. ^ "Larga Indagatoria a los Familiares de Pablo Escobar". 19 November 1999.
  445. ^ King, Julie (15 June 2015). "A Cursed Family: A Look at Pablo Escobar's Family 21 Years After His Death". XPat Nation. Archived from the original on 20 January 2016.
  446. ^ Escobar 2014, pp. 521–537.
  447. ^ Escobar 2014, p. 68.
  448. ^ "Se conoce foto de la hija de Pablo Escobar en Buenos Aires". El Tiempo. 25 April 2018. Archived from the original on 21 September 2018. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  449. ^ "Pablo Escobar's widow and son in Argentina money laundering probe". Deutsche Welle. 1 November 2017. Archived from the original on 21 September 2018. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  450. ^ "Pablo Escobar's widow and son held on money laundering charges in Argentina". 5 June 2018. Archived from the original on 26 May 2019. Retrieved 21 September 2018 – via YouTube.
  451. ^ Lam, Katherine (6 June 2018). "Pablo Escobar's widow, son charged with money laundering in Argentina". Fox News. Archived from the original on 21 September 2018. Retrieved 20 September 2018.
  452. ^ "Pablo Escobar's widow and son held on money laundering charges in Argentina". The Guardian. 5 June 2018. Archived from the original on 21 September 2018. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  453. ^ "Drug lord's son seeks forgiveness". CNN. 12 December 2009. Archived from the original on 6 April 2010. Retrieved 13 February 2010.
  454. ^ Shepherd, Jack (12 September 2016). "Narcos season 2: Pablo Escobar's son labels Netflix show 'insulting', lists 28 historical errors". Independent. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022.
  455. ^ Alexander, Harriet (3 December 2014). "Pablo Escobar's sister trying to pay for the sins of her brother (Luz Maria Escobar), the sister of Colombian cartel boss Pablo Escobar, has told how she is trying to make amends for her murderous brother". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 10 January 2022.
  456. ^ "Familiares exhumaron cadáver de Pablo Escobar para verificar plenamente su identidad". El Tiempo (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  457. ^ "La exhumación de Pablo". Semana (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 23 January 2016. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  458. ^ a b Ceaser, Mike (2 June 2008). "At home on Pablo Escobar's ranch". BBC News. Archived from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 13 February 2010.
  459. ^ "California Business Portal: Successor-In-Interest". 28 April 2015. Archived from the original on 21 February 2015. Retrieved 9 June 2016.
  460. ^ Kraul, Chris (20 December 2006). "A hippo critical situation". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 24 March 2015. Retrieved 27 March 2008.
  461. ^ a b "Colombia kills drug baron hippo". BBC News. 11 July 2009. Archived from the original on 5 January 2015. Retrieved 11 July 2009.
  462. ^ "Hipopótamos bravos". El Espectador. 24 June 2014. Archived from the original on 9 May 2014. Retrieved 28 June 2014. English translation Archived 21 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine at Google Translate
  463. ^ Howard, B.C. (10 May 2016). "Pablo Escobar's Escaped Hippos Are Thriving in Colombia". National Geographic. Archived from the original on 27 February 2018. Retrieved 26 February 2018.
  464. ^ "The Invaders: Cocaine Hippos". National Geographic Channel. Archived from the original on 26 June 2013.
  465. ^ Nagvekar, Rahul (8 March 2017). "Zoo Gone Wild: After Escobar, Colombia Faces His Hippos". The Politic. Archived from the original on 13 September 2017. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
  466. ^ Wilcox, Christie (26 September 2018). "Could Pablo Escobar's Escaped Hippos Help the Environment?". National Geographic. Archived from the original on 11 October 2018. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  467. ^ "Pablo Escobar: Colombia sterilises drug lord's hippos". BBC News. 16 October 2021. Archived from the original on 18 October 2023. Retrieved 16 October 2021.
  468. ^ "Pablo Escobar's six-floor apartment demolished in Medellin as symbol of rebirth". Fox News. 22 February 2019. Archived from the original on 1 March 2019. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
  469. ^ Escobar 2014, p. 74.
  470. ^ "Los Narcopresidentes" [The Narco-presidents]. YouTube (in Spanish). 24 November 2008. Archived from the original on 28 October 2021. Retrieved 15 October 2017.
  471. ^ Mayorga, Emilio (3 September 2017). "Loving Pablo Director on Reuniting Javier Bardem and Penelope Cruz: It's Been Very Intense". Variety. Archived from the original on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  472. ^ Jerry, Tom (30 September 2013). "Me Matan, Limon! -Patricio Rey y sus Redonditos de Ricota". inedito. Archived from the original on 28 October 2021. Retrieved 19 June 2016 – via YouTube.
  473. ^ Macias, Amanda (24 January 2016). "Military & Defense: A luxurious Miami mansion built by the 'King of Cocaine' is no more". Business Insider. Associated Press. Archived from the original on 24 April 2019. Retrieved 10 September 2016.
  474. ^ Macias, Amanda (12 May 2016). "Military & Defense: This dilapidated villa once served as a Caribbean getaway for drug-kingpin Pablo Escobar". Business Insider. Archived from the original on 19 September 2018. Retrieved 10 September 2016.
  475. ^ Escobar, Roberto (2010). Escobar. Hodder Paperbacks.
  476. ^ McAleese, Peter (1993). No Mean Soldier. Cassell Pub.
  477. ^ Bowden, Mark (2002). Killing Pablo: The Hunt for the World's Greatest Outlaw. Penguin Pub.
  478. ^ a b McNary, Dave (1 October 2007). "Yari fast-tracking Escobar biopic". Variety. Retrieved 29 November 2007.
  479. ^ a b "What is actor Christian Bale doing next?". Journal Now. 25 December 2008. Archived from the original on 5 June 2009. Retrieved 17 January 2009.
  480. ^ Escobar, Juan Pablo (2016). Pablo Escobar: My Father. Thomas Dunne Books. ISBN 9781250104625.
  481. ^ "Weekly Screengrab: Sparring Partners". TribecaFilmFestival.org. 1 October 2007.[permanent dead link]
  482. ^ Pablo Escobar: The King of Coke. National Geographic. 2007. Archived from the original on 21 December 2019. Retrieved 10 September 2016. (Amazon)
  483. ^ Pablo Escobar: The King of Coke. National Geographic. 2007. Archived from the original on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 10 September 2016. (La Peliculas)
  484. ^ "No Bardem for Killing Pablo". WhatCulture. Archived from the original on 21 November 2008. Retrieved 27 July 2013.
  485. ^ Fleming, Michael (8 October 2007). "Stone to produce another 'Escobar'". Variety. Retrieved 28 November 2007.
  486. ^ "Venezuelan actor Edgar Ramirez to Play Pablo Escobar". Poor But Happy. Archived from the original on 4 May 2009.
  487. ^ Faraci, Devin (14 August 2008). "Joe Carnahan Is Going to Be Killing a New Pablo, and We Know Who It Is". Chud. Archived from the original on 15 August 2008.
  488. ^ Fleming, Michael (12 December 2008). "Bob Yari crashes into Chapter 11". Variety.
  489. ^ Vivarelli, Nick (11 September 2017). "Javier Bardem on Playing Pablo Escobar With Penelope Cruz in Loving Pablo". Variety. Archived from the original on 17 April 2019. Retrieved 11 October 2017.
  490. ^ "'American Made': Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. 29 September 2017. Archived from the original on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 24 November 2017.
  491. ^ "Mugshots | Pablo Escobar – Hunting the Druglord". snagfilms.com. 2005. Archived from the original on 24 October 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2017. This episode follows Escobar on his journey to becoming the Colombian Godfather.
  492. ^ Barius, Claudette (18 June 2007). "Entourage: The making of Medellín". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on 17 November 2016. Retrieved 4 September 2016.
  493. ^ "The Two Escobars". the2escobars.com. Archived from the original on 4 December 2015. Retrieved 1 October 2010.
  494. ^ "Telemundo Media's 'Pablo Escobar, El Patron del Mal' Averages Nearly 2.2 Million Total Viewersby zap2it.com". TV by the Numbers. Zap2It. 10 July 2012. Archived from the original on 19 July 2012. Retrieved 4 September 2016.
  495. ^ Shepherd, Jack (28 July 2015). "New on Netflix August 2015: From Narcos and Spellbound to Kick Ass 2 and Dinotrux". The Independent. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved 4 September 2016.
  496. ^ Strause, Jackie (2 September 2016). "'Narcos' Season 2: Episode-by-Episode Binge-Watching Guide". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 18 October 2023. Retrieved 4 September 2016.
  497. ^ Sang, Lucia I. Suarez (30 August 2016). "Ex-DEA agents who fought Pablo Escobar headline new NatGeo documentary". Fox News. Archived from the original on 18 October 2023. Retrieved 13 October 2017.
  498. ^ "Countdown to Death: Pablo Escobar". Netflix.[permanent dead link]
  499. ^ "Is Countdown to Death: Pablo Escobar (2017) on Netflix USA?". What's New on Netflix USA. Archived from the original on 18 October 2023. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  500. ^ "E-40 – 'The Block Brochure Parts 4, 5 & 6' (Album Covers & Track Lists)". hiphop-n-more.com. 29 October 2013. Archived from the original on 18 October 2023. Retrieved 10 June 2021.
  501. ^ Trzcinski, Matthew (5 May 2020). "Kanye West Once Explained the Identity of Pablo From 'The Life of Pablo'". cheatsheet.com. Archived from the original on 18 October 2023. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  502. ^ Dubdogz – Pablo Escobar (feat. Charlott Boss) [Official Music Video], 10 July 2020, retrieved 3 September 2022
  503. ^ "Migos – Narcos". Youtube. 27 June 2018. Archived from the original on 18 April 2019. Retrieved 27 June 2018.

Media related to Pablo Escobar at Wikimedia Commons