|
|
|
|
|
George JungGeorge Jung (born in Weymouth, Massachusetts) was a major player in cocaine importation in the US in the 1970s and early 80s, a part of the Medellin Cartel. He was somewhat inaccurately portrayed in the movie Blow. He started out as a marijuana importer in the 1960s, importing hundreds of pounds of the drug from Mexico, taking off from Puerto Vallarta and landing in Palm Springs, California in dry riverbeds. Though his enterprise grew to the point where he was making up to $100,000 per month and using professional pilots, he was eventually arrested in Chicago after being turned in by an associate. "Some people were movie stars, and some people were rock stars. Me? I was a pot star," he has said. In prison in Danbury, Connecticut, his bunkmate was Carlos Lehder, an American of Colombian descent with some expertise in cocaine. Together, they used their respective areas of knowledge to hatch a plan to import cocaine from Colombia using small planes. Upon release, they went into action, using Bahamanian airstrips as stop-over and refueling points, spreading bribes around to grease their way and ensure protection. By the late 70s, Lehder's plans became more grandiose, and as he schemed to build a massive transport empire on a private Bahamanian island, he began to shut Jung out of his operations. By this time, however, Jung had married into the Colombian end of the drug cartel and developed strong connections there, being personal friends with kingpin Pablo Escobar. After he was closed out of Lehder's ballooning enterprise, he was able to take a more modest line of independent smuggling directly through Escobar, operating in much the same manner as before. In this way, he made more than $100 million. He was later arrested in Massachusetts with only several ounces of cocaine, but faced a 10 year mandatory sentence. With his family, he skipped bail, but very quickly became involved in another deal, where he was betrayed by a pilot of his acquaintance who was secretly working with the DEA. He agreed to testify against Carlos Lehder and received a reduced sentence. He is scheduled to be released in 2015, at age 72. External link Jung, George
|
 |
|
| Copyright 2005-2009 OnPedia.com. All Rights Reserved |
|
|