During the Medellín Cartel’s heyday in the mid-’80s—at
the height of the crack epidemic in the United States—Escobar supplied about
80 percent of the world’s cocaine, including up to 15 tons a day
destined for the U.S. market, much of it by air.
THE DAILY BEAST: I
understand Escobar took great pride in his so-called “air force,” which
included planes for both smuggling and personal use. Also that there were some
pretty wild times and airborne fiestas. Can you tell us more about how Pablo
used his planes?
POPEYE: Pablo
Escobar managed a fleet of almost 140 planes that he used for almost all his
drug trafficking operations. But his only pleasure plane was a Lear
Jet. Back in the ’80s there were only two Lear Jets in all of Colombia. One
owned by Pablo Escobar, and the other by businessman Julio
Mario Santodomingo. Escobar’s Lear was the “Avión Superior,” a super-plane
where Pablo Escobar had fun. Once he took $2 million in cash and flew off to
the carnival at Rio de Janeiro—and spent everything he’d brought with him,
right down to the last dollar. He flew to the U.S., too, and had a good time.
TDB: What other
kinds of “good times” did he have aboard the Lear? And what were the logistics
involved in flying that thing around in Colombia?
POPEYE: This
high-speed plane couldn’t land at the airstrip of the Hacienda Nápoles
[Escobar’s compound]. Its force and size only allowed it to operate out of
Olaya Herrera, the Medellín city airport. Once several beautiful Brazilian
women flew to Medellín in the Lear Jet and from there in a King 300 to the
Nápoles ranch. The beauties made love to each other for the delight of the
mighty capo at 30,000 feet.
Roberto Striedinger was the pilot. It wasn’t easy to
find someone qualified to fly this powerful machine. And the Avión Superior was
never used for cocaine trafficking—but only for the pleasure of El Patrón.
TDB: So
aviation was a key factor in the Medellin Cartel’s ability to process cocaine
on an industrial scale, which in turn allowed Escobar to become the world’s top
supplier. Can you talk a little about the size and scope of the production process,
and how planes were employed in shipping the raw materials to the lab?
POPEYE: At that time
the cocaine paste, the base, was brought from Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador in
small planes to the Colombian wilderness, passing from one jungle airstrip to
another.A powerful trafficker received planes like the Navajo Caneca and the
[Cessna] Centurion in Leticia, in the Colombian Amazon. From there other small
planes took the cocaine paste to a super-laboratory of the Medellín cartel.
Evaristo Porras, a cocaine addict, had total control in Leticia.
From there he coordinated shipments off to
Tranquilandia, the super-laboratory owned by Pablo Escobar, José Gonzalo
Rodríguez Gacha, and Jorgé Luis Ochoa Vásquez.
TDB: I’ve seen
pictures of the ruins at Tranquilandia, and it does look to have been huge.
What was the lab’s capacity? And what role did the Escobarian “air force” play
in all of this?
POPEYE: On the
plains of Yarí, 30,000 kilos [about 66,000 pounds] of cocaine were processed in
the Colombian jungle every month.
These small-plane operations were conducted on a grand
scale. Some of the planes were used to haul cocaine paste, others acetone and
ether, to process the paste and turn it into pure cocaine. Other aircraft moved
personnel, food, and fuel for the large power plant that illuminated the huge
laboratory.
The chain of processing stations was built in the
heart of the jungle. The laboratory waste would not be a problem, a river would
swallow the runoff near the laboratory and the smells would not be a mess either,
the jungle would absorb them. The soul of the laboratory was the complex of
paved runways.
TDB: I wonder just how Escobar used these aircraft for exporting contraband from Tranquilandia. For example, I’ve heard steps were taken to increase cargo capacity, and change each plane’s papers and identification markers. How did that work, please? And what did the smuggling routes look like?
POPEYE: When the processed cocaine was ready it was flown from the lab to all over the world in airplanes with great cargo capacity and good autopilot capabilities. The ideal plane was the King 300. The interior would be dismantled, the chairs removed, anything superfluous or heavy thrown out and replaced with containers. Additional fuel could be carried on the wings. Depending on the destination, it could carry [up to] 700-900 kilos [1,540 – 1,980 lbs] of cocaine.
The load would be just cocaine and fuel, and the pilot would bring his mechanic. The routes were to the USA, Mexico, the Bahamas, Cuba, Panama, Haiti, and Nicaragua. Aircraft went with cocaine and returned with money and weapons.
Aircraft purchases were often made in the U.S. with front companies. The planes’ registrations were altered as were the national flags, depending on the destination. The flotilla also included turbo command aircraft, and each plane was carefully chosen for its mission.
Chivis I know I’m asking to much but a story on el cartel de Los soles would be a great article
ReplyDeleteM”
Cartel de Los soles the biggest and powerful cartel in the world imo
ReplyDeleteM”
Great story...KIC!
ReplyDeleteMexico-Watcher