Watch Escobar: Paradise Lost Online
Pablo Escobar's son Sebastian Marroquin reveals the fear of his childood. It was the home that every little boy dreams of. With an extensive go- kart race track, massive swimming pools and even a private zoo housing millions of dollars worth of rare and exotic animals, the seven square miles of land in the Colombian countryside that made up the Naples Estate may have looked like the ideal place to grow up. But for a young Sebastian Marroquin, it was also a place of fear - and not just because of the escaped hippopotamus that live feral in the rivers and lakes surrounding the grounds to this day.
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In Colombia, a young surfer meets the woman of his dreams - and then he meets her uncle, Pablo Escobar. · · The Medellin cartel - the most violent, ruthless and wealthy criminal organization in the history of modern crime. And the one man who lorded over them all.
Scroll Down for Video Pablo Escobar's son Sebastian Marroquin (left) has revealed his extraordinary childhood growing up on his father's sprawling estate in the Colombia countryside. The pair are pictured together in Sebastian's youth. Escobar's sprawling Naples Estate (pictured in 1. Instead the main reason for youngster's fear was for the safety of his billionaire crime baron father Pablo Escobar - at the time the world's most wanted drug lord - who was engaged in a long and bloody war with both rival cocaine trafficking gangs and the Colombian state.
Marroquin, now 3. Forbes magazine with an estimated £1. With the money came extraordinary excess - particularly within the plush surrounds of the Naples Estate. Marroquin, who changed his name from Juan Pablo Escobar, has recalled how the sprawling estate featured fleets of vintage cars, house servants, swimming pools and the bizarre sight of exotic animals - including elephants - bought at huge expense by his father. Marroquin, now 3. Forbes magazine with an estimated £1. The mansion featured a private zoo with exotic animals - including elephants - bought at huge expense by his father. This 2. 00. 6 picture shows a now abandoned bull ring at the Naples Estate, the favored recreation home of Pablo Escobar.
Further details of the incredible riches he witnessed as a child were revealed in his book 'Pablo Escobar: My Father'. The autobiography, which went on to become a best seller in Latin America, revealed details of wild parties where piñatas were stuffed full of tens of thousands of dollars in cash. Helicopters were reportedly sent out to collect particular fast food demands by children at the house while the crumbling remains of Escobar's estate include a private bullfighting ring and airstrip. But along with this fantasy world, Marroquin has recalled stories of betrayal and death and of Escobar's erratic behaviour. Watch Backcountry 4Shared.
ESCOBAR: 'THE KING OF COCAINE'Trafficker: Pablo Escobar was worth $3. Born in 1. 94. 9, Pablo Emilio Escobar Gaviria started his criminal career on the streets of Medellin in Colombia as a teenager, selling contraband cigarettes and stealing cars. When he was gunned down by Colombian National Police on December 2 1. After working for a short time as a bodyguard in the early 1. Escobar moved on to cocaine trafficking. His operation became so successful that he was able to buy 1.
United States. Escobar amassed so much cash that he had to spend around $2. His Medellin Cartel inevitably attracted the attention of the authorities, but Escobar dealt with them mercilessly. He either bribed them or had them assassinated, which is where the likes of John Jairo Velasquez came in.
Escobar was eventually gunned down in 1. Colombian police, who found him in a middle- class home in Medellin, with the help of U. S special forces, after a 1. He was shot while trying to escape across nearby roofs with his bodyguard, Alvaro de Jesus Agudelo, who was also shot and killed. In the past, he has told how his drug lord father burnt more than £1million to keep his daughter warm during a single night on the run. He said the cocaine baron lit a bonfire using wads of U. S. dollars at a mountain hideout while he was being hunted by authorities fearing his daughter Manuela was suffering from hypothermia. They also used the fire, fuelled using $2million dollars (£1.
Colombian magazine 'Don Juan' in 2. At the time, he also revealed that a security- mad Escobar even bought his own taxi firm to find out when outsiders arrived in their native Medillin.
Marroquin said he and his family were moved every two days between 1. He even blindfolded them before each move so that they could never work out the whereabouts of each house and give the locations to torturers if they were captured, Marroquin claimed in the interview. Last year he told how he was just nine when he got his first lesson in drugs from his father. Escobar told him he had tried every drug there was except heroin, and urged his young son never to use them - or to follow in his footsteps.'My father's not a person to be imitated.
He showed us the path we must never take as a society because it's the path to self- destruction, the loss of values and a place where life ceases to have importance,' Marroquin said. In the interview with AFP in November, he said he decided to write his autobiography to tell the story of his youth from his own perspective. 'I had the strange privilege of being Pablo Escobar's son. To me he was a great father.
I have thousands of letters he wrote me giving me advice.. But even these stories of fatherly protectiveness contain threads of Escobar's trademark violence.'My father even threatened to kill his employees if they so much as smoked a joint in front of me,' he said. In an interview with the Independent this week, he revealed that when he was 1. Medellin. It prompted him and his mother to plead with Escobar to bring the violence to an end - but to no avail.'My mother and I begged him many times to abandon the violence, but he had reached the point of no return.'Marroquin says he became aware of his father's notoriety as the biggest drugs baron on the planet in 1.
It was the same year that Escobar assassinated one of his biggest critics in the Colombian government, Justice Minister Rodrigo Lara. He told Deutsche Welle in a recent interview that it soon became clear his father 'wasn't the officer worker I thought, even if he didn't follow the conventional office schedule.' While an enemy of the U. S. and Colombian governments, he was a hero to many in Medellin where he distributed money to the poor. Watch Desperate Housewives Season 2 Ep 6. While an enemy of the U. S. and Colombian governments, he was a hero to many in Medellin (pictured) where he distributed money to the poor.
By 2. 00. 4, this was the view of the once luxurious swimming pool area at the ranch 'Napoles' built by Pablo Escobar in the 1. His son has revealed how the billionaire built football fields so the children in poor neighbourhoods would stay away from drugs - while funding the outreach projects with cash from huge drug deals. By 1. 98. 9, at the height of his power, Escobar was selling 8.
But it all came to an end in December 1. Medellin Cartel was gunned down on the roof of a two- storey house as he tried to elude the Search Bloc, a special police unit established to lead the manhunt. My father even threatened to kill his employees if they so much as smoked a joint in front of me By that time, ‘The King of Cocaine’ and other members of the cartel had become the world’s most wanted drug traffickers. Marroquin maintains his father was not killed by police in the gunfight, but rather took his own life by shooting himself in the head.'I have no doubt' he planned his death, he said in November - though he added he was publishing his version of the story because he had evidence to support it, not to show his father as 'a hero or martyr.' His book also delves into Escobar's betrayal by his own family, including his brother Roberto, who became an informant for the US Drug Enforcement Administration. He said nothing was left of his father's fortune. Escobar's enemies - 'including people who had once been his friends' - claimed it as plunder after his death, he said.
But 'I'm grateful that happened,' Marroquin added. We started over again.' Escobar kept references to his drug smuggling life throughout his estate - including a plane he used to transport his illegal hoard.