He was the most powerful criminal in modern history—a Forbes’ list billionaire drug dealer who ordered the assassinations of frontrunner presidential candidates and Supreme Court judges.
The lead investigators trying to take him down? A former railroad cop from Virginian Appalachia, and a watermelon farmer from Texas who’d joined the DEA after leaving his bride at the altar an hour before their wedding.
In their new book Manhunters: How We Took Down Pablo Escobar, special agents Javier Peña and Steve Murphy detail the rise of their careers and their eventual partnership with agents in Colombia, where they helped bring down Pablo Escobar’s Medellin Cartel.
A&E caught up with the co-authors about the work they did on the front lines of America’s war on drugs.
One of the things that jumps out at me about this book is how different your backgrounds are. Steve, before you went to Colombia you were stationed in Miami, where you would get annoyed when menus would only appear in Spanish. Javier, you’re of Mexican descent and were doing undercover work at brothels and drug dens throughout Texas. Given those different backgrounds, what was the first impression you had of each other, as colleagues in Colombia?
Javier Peña: When Steve arrived I was already in Medellin. When you first meet someone it’s a little weird—we don’t know each other, and basically the way it started really was—boom!— in Medellin. Right onto the frying pan. But my first impression was that he’s a worker. And we’re very different, so we complimented each other. He’s very organized, meticulous—and I’m not. He would see my desk at the end of a day, and it’d be just full of papers. He’d make running jokes about it.
Steve Murphy: Well, we were opposites. I’m very organized, but Javier has a brain like an encyclopedia.
Steve, how was your Spanish? In the book you mention that you had to take an intensive course before deployment to Colombia. Did being a non-native speaker hinder your work?
Steve Murphy: I can speak Spanish. But it did affect my work, because I was taught to speak proper Spanish. I don’t even speak proper English.
They tend to talk real fast, and I was the only gringo [working] with Colombian National Police. But something I came to really love about Colombia: Colombians are some of the nicest people in the world. They’re very accepting, and that carried over into the police. As long as you’re trying, they’d bend over backwards to help you. It was very pleasant surprise.