On This Day — Pablo Escobar is killed in Medellin (December 2 1993) [UPDATE : Colombia’s cocaine production at record high]

“What we’ve learned is that if you look at history what happened with the Medellin Cartel after we took them down, Cali Cartel got stronger, right? Then we take them down, and North Valle Cartel takes over. We’re taking down cartels, and another cartel is born.”

Javier Pena — Former DEA officer

Fernando Botero’s portrayal of Pablo Escobar’s death

December 2 2022 — Pablo Emilio Escobar Gaviria (December 1 1949 – December 2 1993) was a Colombian drug lord and narco-terrorist. His cartel supplied an estimated 80% of the cocaine smuggled into the United States at the height of his career, turning over US$21.9 billion a year in personal income. Follow us on Twitter: @INTEL_TODAY

RELATED POST: Colombia — Juan Pablo Escobar: “My Father Worked for the CIA.” [UPDATE]

RELATED POST: The Real Story Behind Netflix’s Narcos

RELATED POST: Remembering “DARK ALLIANCE”: Gary Webb (31 August 1955 – 10 December 2004)

RELATED POST: American Made –Tom Cruise to play Medellin cartel pilot Barry Seal

RELATED POST: The long history of CIA involvement in the international narcotics trade — [Documentary]

RELATED POST: The New Chiquita Papers: “Records Identify Banana Executives who Bankrolled Terror in Colombia”

RELATED POST: The Real CIA NARCOS Story Netflix Ignored

RELATED POST: US REPORT: Colombia’s cocaine production is ‘up’. Really?

“We had an increase in sown hectares and cocaine production that are without precedent in the history of the country.”

Justice Minister Nestor Osuna
(October 2022)

UPDATE (December 2 2022) — Potential production of cocaine in Colombia and the area sown with coca rose last year to their highest levels in two decades of monitoring. [United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC)]

Calculated output rose 14% to 1,400 metric tons and the area sown with coca shot up 43% to 204,000 hectares (500,000 acres). Please keep in mind that, at the time of Escobar’s death, Colombia’s coca cultivation amounted to about  40,000 hectares. That is more than a five-fold increase!

Increases in output are due to more productive varieties, better technical assistance and the replanting of coca bushes, the UNODC report said.

And of course… The UN figures contradict recent numbers published by the U.S. White House, which reported potential cocaine output fell last year to 972 tonnes.

END of UPDATE

“My father worked for the CIA selling cocaine to finance the fight against Communism in Central America.”

Juan Pablo Escobar

UPDATE (December 2 2021) — UPDATE : Colombia Growing Record Amounts Of Coca

Since the death of Pablo Escobar, Washington has contributed around $10 billion (€8.8 billion) to Plan Colombia in order to eradicate cocaine production in the country.

The result is not entirely satisfactory. In recent years, Colombia’s coca cultivation has reached an all time high.

The area occupied by coca crops in Colombia expanded to 245,000 hectares at the end of 2020 (15.5% increase from 2019), and cocaine production capacity rose to 1,010 metric tons a year, the U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) reported in June 2021. [REUTERS — Colombia coca crop area expanded to 245,000 hectares in 2020]

At the time of Escobar’s death, Colombia’s coca cultivation amounted to about  40,000 hectares…

Once again the ONDCP numbers differ significantly from those published by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) on June 9 2021, which indicated the coca crop area declined 7% to 143,000 hectares, but said potential cocaine output rose 8% to 1,228 metric tons a year.

According to the White House Press Release, the U.S.-Colombia counter-narcotics partnership remains strong, but high rates of COVID-19 impacted their overall efforts to reduce coca cultivation…

In a excellent piece [Colombia’s Cocaine Keeps On Reaching New Heights] published by Insight Crime, the authors explain how the amount of powdered cocaine extracted from a single hectare of coca increased by more than one kilogram in just a year. [from 6.7 kilograms per hectare in 2019 to 7.9 kilograms in 2020]

Three factors are possibly allowing traffickers to produce more cocaine from less coca acreage: larger production facilities, better sowing techniques and more cocaine being extracted from leaves.

Please, keep in mind that the official statistics about Colombia’s cocaine production should be taken with a ‘pinch of salt’. The estimate is very difficult to make and can be ‘exploited’ to fudge the numbers according to a political agenda.

END of UPDATE

“These trends show the need to increase holistic approaches that combine economic development, increased government presence and citizen security, seizures and eradication in key rural areas to sustainably reduce cocaine production and build peace in areas affected by conflict.”

U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy (June 2021)

Escobar was often called “The King of Cocaine” and was the wealthiest criminal in history, with an estimated known net worth of between US$25 and US$30 billion by the early 1990s (equivalent to between about $48.5 and $56 billion as of 2017), making him one of the richest men in the world in his prime.

A Colombian electronic surveillance team, led by Brigadier Hugo Martínez, used radio trilateration technology to track his radiotelephone transmissions and found him hiding in Los Olivos, a middle-class barrio in Medellín.

With authorities closing in, a gun fight with Escobar and his bodyguard, Álvaro de Jesús Agudelo (alias “El Limón”), ensued.

The two fugitives attempted to escape by running across the roofs of adjoining houses to reach a back street, but both were shot and killed by Colombian National Police.

Escobar suffered gunshots to the leg and torso, and a fatal gunshot through the ear.

It has never been proven who actually fired the final shot into his ear, or determined whether this shot was made during the gunfight or as part of a possible execution, with wide speculation remaining regarding the subject.

Some of Escobar’s relatives believe that he had committed suicide.

His two brothers, Roberto Escobar and Fernando Sánchez Arellano, believe that he shot himself through the ear.

“Pablo  committed suicide. He did not get killed. During all the years they went after him, he would say to me every day that if he was really cornered without a way out, he would shoot himself through the ear.”

Roberto Escobar

Who Killed Pablo Escobar? Truth Told by DEA Agents

DEA special agents Javier Peña and Steve Murphy were assigned as the lead investigators targeting Escobar and his organization.

These true American heroes provide a first-hand lesson in history as they discuss their efforts bringing down the world’s first narco-terrorist, the challenges they faced in oftentimes hostile and life-threatening environments, and the innovative strategies they employed to successfully end the reign of terror of the world’s most wanted criminal.

UPDATE (December 2 2019) — Since the death of Pablo Escobar, Washington has  contributed around $10 billion (€8.8 billion) to Plan Colombia in order to eradicate cocaine production in the country.

The result is not entirely satisfactory. In recent years, Colombia’s coca cultivation has reached an all time high.

According to the latest annual report from the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Colombia’s cocaine production rose by 25% to reach a record 1,976 tons in 2017, fueled mostly by a rise in cultivation practices, which have increased from 46,000 hectares (about 113,700 acres) in 2013 to 171,000 in 2017.

RELATED POST: Colombia — UNODC Report 2018 : Cocaine Production Hits New Record // UPDATE — Secretary of State Mike Pompeo : “U.S. Deeply Concerned”

At the time of Escobar’s death, Colombia’s coca cultivation amounted to about  40,000 hectares.

Please, keep in mind that the official statistics about Colombia’s cocaine production should be taken with a ‘pinch of salt’. The estimate is very difficult to make and can be ‘exploited’ to fudge the numbers according to a political agenda.

UPDATE (December 2 2020) — According to the latest report by the Illicit Cultivations Monitoring System (Sistema Integrado de Monitoreo de Cultivos Ilícitos — SIMCI) of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), coca crops in Colombia dropped from the 169,000 hectares in 2018 to 154,000 hectares in 2019.

However, despite the 15,000 hectares decrease in coca crops, production of cocaine increased 1.5 percent, to 1,136 metric tons in 2019.

Either the reported large reduction in coca crops is simply wrong or else the narcos demonstrate that, with a bit of strategic thinking, you really can do more with less!

Actually, the UNODC’s drop in coca crops is at odds with figures published in March 2020 by the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP).

The ONDCP reported 212,000 hectares of coca crops in Colombia in 2019 which is a small increase of 4,000 hectares of coca crops from the 208,000 hectares recorded in 2018. 

A few years ago, I convinced Colombia lawmakers to adopt the International System of Units. The Republic of Colombia became a Member State of the ‘Meter Convention’ in 2013.

RELATED POST: Havana Syndrome — A Quiet Revolution [May 20 2019]

That is a step in the right direction but obviously the accounting of coca crops still needs a bit of tweaking… Or is it less?

One conclusion is however pretty obvious. Since the death of Pablo Escobar, coca cultivation in Colombia has increased about four-fold. Pablo was a bloody amateur.

END of UPDATE

REFERENCES

Pablo Escobar — Wikipedia

=

On This Day — Pablo Escobar Killed in Medellin (December 2 1993)

On This Day — Pablo Escobar Killed in Medellin (December 2 1993) [2019]

On This Day — Pablo Escobar is killed in Medellin (December 2 1993) [2020]

On This Day — Pablo Escobar is killed in Medellin (December 2 1993) [UPDATE : Colombia Growing Record Amounts Of Coca]

On This Day — Pablo Escobar is killed in Medellin (December 2 1993) [UPDATE : Colombia’s cocaine production at record high]

This entry was posted in Cocaine, Colombia and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s