Having sensational amounts of money doesn't usually equate to living an action-packed life. Look at Forbes's annual "The World's Billionaires" list and you'll find magnates who work in software development and hedge fund management, in telecommunications and retail apparel. Comic-book billionaires like Iron Man and Lex Luthor are supposed to only exist in fiction.
So it's surreal imagining one of the world's wealthiest people cut down by a hail of gunfire on a terracotta rooftop in South America. But in December 1993, that's exactly what happened to Colombian cocaine baron Pablo Escobar.
A&E looks back on Escobar's rise to power and prosperity, and investigates who fired the bullet that took his life.
Who Was Pablo Escobar, and How Did He Become So Powerful?
Born in 1949 to a lower middle-class family in northwestern Colombia, Escobar came of age in Medellín—Colombia's second-largest city. In the 1970s he helped found the Medellín Cartel, a sophisticated drug-trafficking operation that, at the height of operations, was responsible for 80 percent of the cocaine sold in the United States.
The cartel's rise to power wasn't happenstance, says Bruce Bagley, a professor of International Studies at the University of Miami who specializes in U.S.-Latin American drug trafficking. Rather, it was the result of several factors, starting with Medellín itself.
"Western Colombia and Medellín was the principle commercial center of Colombia. It was the cradle of Colombian entrepreneurship," Bagley says. "That does not mean only legal activity."