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Manhunters : how we took down Pablo Escobar

Murphy, Steve (Steven E.) (Author). Pena, Javier F. (DEA special agent) (Added Author). Ocampo, Ramon de. (Added Author). Shapiro, Rob. (Added Author).

The explosive memoir of the two legendary drug enforcement agents responsible for taking down Pablo Escobar and the subject of the hit Netflix series 'Narcos'. Javier Peña and Steve Murphy risked their lives hunting large and small drug traffickers in the decades they spent working for the US Drug Enforcement Administration. But their biggest challenge was the hunt for Pablo Escobar in Colombia. The partners, who began their careers as small-town cops, have been immortalised in Netflix's 'Narcos', a fictionalised account of their hunt for Escobar. Now, for the first time, they tell the real story of how they brought down the world's first narco-terrorist and ended the reign of terror of the world's most wanted criminal. Manhunters takes you deep inside the inner workings of the Search Bloc, the joint Colombian-US task force that resulted in an intensive 18-month operation that tracked Escobar. Between July 1992 and December 1993, Peña and Murphy lived on the edge, setting up camp in Medellin at the Carlos Holguin Military Academy. There, they lived and worked with the Colombian authorities, hunting down a man thought to be untouchable. Their terrifying first-hand experience coupled with stories from the DEA's de-classified files on the search for Escobar forms the beating heart of Manhunters, a gripping account of how two determined and courageous agents risked everything to capture the world's most wanted man.

Book  - 2019
364.1 Mur
1 copy / 0 on hold

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Location
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  • ISBN: 9781250202888
  • Physical Description 345 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 22 cm
  • Edition First edition.
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2019.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 9781250202888
Manhunters : How We Took down Pablo Escobar
Manhunters : How We Took down Pablo Escobar
by Murphy, Steve; Pena, Javier F.
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Publishers Weekly Review

Manhunters : How We Took down Pablo Escobar

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

What was it like to be an American DEA agent in Colombia in the early 1990s? Like living in a war zone is how Murphy and Peña describe their time in Bogotá spent hunting drug lord Pablo Escobar in this riveting account of the multinational effort to stop the man behind the Medellín Cartel. Besides supplying cocaine to America, Escobar was behind the kidnaping and assassination of his country's attorney general and the bombing of a passenger jet in 1989. Murphy and Peña were paid 50% more than stateside DEA agents because of the danger of their mission, and their lives were put on the line multiple times. Through it all, the two agents became trusted partners and best friends, who watched Escobar surrender on TV in 1991, only to reactivate the search when the drug lord escaped from his prison cell the next year. When Escobar was gunned down by the Colombian police in 1993, people celebrated in Colombia, and, not coincidentally, the murder rate in Medellín dropped by 80%. This is a must-read for anyone interested in one of the major campaigns in the war on drugs. 100,000 copy announced first printing. Agent: Luke Janklow, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc. (Nov.)

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 9781250202888
Manhunters : How We Took down Pablo Escobar
Manhunters : How We Took down Pablo Escobar
by Murphy, Steve; Pena, Javier F.
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BookList Review

Manhunters : How We Took down Pablo Escobar

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

Two veteran DEA agents detail their years spent in Colombia tracking down notorious drug trafficker Pablo Escobar. During the 1980s and early '90s, Colombia was a hotbed of cocaine distribution and extreme violence, much of it perpetrated by Escobar. He employed numerous sicarios, hired killers, to torture and kill police officers, government officials, and members of rival cartels. Murphy and Peña arrive in Colombia a few years into their DEA employment, at the height of violence there, and make it their mission to find Escobar. With the help of the Colombian police and lots of informants, they risk their lives (often undercover) time and again. They take turns telling their story, which serves them well as they recount their individual paths to the DEA and then Colombia, but after they begin working together, this style slows down the action and loses some tension. Readers looking for an Escobar biography will be disappointed, but those wanting the real story and the brave men behind the TV show Narcos will be thrilled.--Kathy Sexton Copyright 2019 Booklist

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9781250202888
Manhunters : How We Took down Pablo Escobar
Manhunters : How We Took down Pablo Escobar
by Murphy, Steve; Pena, Javier F.
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Kirkus Review

Manhunters : How We Took down Pablo Escobar

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Two former Drug Enforcement Administration operatives serve up a thriller-esque account of chasing down a notorious narco kingpin."It was our colleagues from the Colombian National Police who actually pulled the trigger, but after spending every waking moment going after that scumbag for six years, it was our victory as well." So writes Pea at the end of a narrative in which he and Murphythe agents who were portrayed in the Netflix series Narcostake turns recounting the hunt for Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar. The exultation at Escobar's demise in a monsoon of bullets is a little unseemly, but one quickly comes to understand why the world should be happy that Escobar is goneeven if, as the authors allow, not a whole lot has changed, with actors on the bad side simply shifting roles and positions of authority. Among the players that Murphy and Pea describe is a "sicario," or hit man, who boasted of killing more than 300 people on Escobar's behalf. Most such foot soldiers were teenagers who lived for only a year or two before being killed by paramilitaries, vigilantes, rival gangsters, or the police, but while they lived, they were able to provide for their families in ways unavailable to otherwise unemployed youth. The narrative is a pretty by-the-numbers affair: There are the obligatory scenes of their early years and how they came to be federal agents, the academy hijinks, and the internal politics and interagency rivalries. The best part of the book is the authors' portrait of two very different countries, Colombia and the U.S., and the different cultures of the police in each country. For example, one leading Colombian law enforcement official who figures prominently in their account was glad to yield to Escobar in negotiations, a concession that "prolonged the war against him and led to the deaths of thousands of innocent victims." Mark Bowden's Killing Pablo is by far the better book, but this one reveals enough interesting details to keep the pages turning.For Narcos fans and drug-war buffs. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.