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The Last Kilo

Willy Falcon and the Cocaine Empire That Seduced America

ebook
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0 of 1 copy available

From true-crime legend T. J. English, the epic, behind-the-scenes saga of "Los Muchachos," one of the most successful cocaine trafficking organizations in American history—a story of glitz, glamour, and organized crime set against 1980's Miami.

Despite what Scarface might lead one to believe, violence was not the dominant characteristic of the cocaine business. It was corruption: the dirty cops, agents, lawyers, judges, and politicians who made the drug world go round. And no one managed that carousel of dangerous players better than Willy Falcon.

A Cuban exile whose family escaped Fidel Castro's Cuba when he was eleven years old, Falcon, as a teenager, became active in the anti-Castro movement. He began smuggling cocaine into the U.S. as a way to raise money to buy arms for the Contras in Central America. This counter-revolutionary activity led directly to Willy's genesis as a narco. He and his partners built an extraordinary international organization from the ground up. Los Muchachos, the syndicate founded by Falcon, thrived as a major cocaine distribution network in the U.S. from the late 1970's into the early 1990's. At their height, Los Muchachos made more than a hundred million dollars a year. At the same time, Willy, his brother Tavy Falcon, and partner Sal Magluta became famous as championship powerboat racers.

Cocaine, used by everyone from A-list celebrities to lawyers and people in law enforcement, came to define an era, and for a time, Willy Falcon and those like him—major suppliers, of whom there were only a few—became stars in their own right. They were the deliverers of good times, at least until the downside of persistent cocaine use became apparent: delusions of grandeur, psychological addiction, financial ruin. Thus, the War on Drugs was born, and federal authorities came after Falcon and his crew with a vengeance. Willy found himself on the run, his marriage and family life in shambles, the halcyon days of boat races and lavish trips to Vegas and parties at the Mutiny night club seemingly a distant memory.

T. J. English has been granted unprecedented access to the inner workings of Los Muchachos, sitting down with Willy Falcon and his associates for many lengthy interviews, and revealing never-before-understood details about drug trafficking. A classic of true-crime writing from a master of the genre, The Last Kilo traces the rise and fall of a true cocaine empire—and the lives left in its wake.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 28, 2024
      In this sizzling true crime account, bestseller English (Dangerous Rhythms) delves into the world of cocaine trafficking in 1980s Miami. His focus is Augusto “Willy” Falcon, kingpin of a group called Los Muchachos, who imported as many as 75 tons and $2.6 billion of cocaine into South Florida from the 1970s through the early ’90s. Falcon was born in Cuba, and his family fled the Castro regime for Miami’s Little Havana neighborhood in 1967, when he was 11 years old. There, a teenage Falcon dropped out of school, got married, and began dealing cocaine with a “coke for arms” group funding anti-Castro forces. He worked alongside his former high school friend, powerboat racer Sal Maglut, launching Los Muchachos and expanding their operations across Latin America. Reported largely from English’s interviews with Falcon after he was released from prison in 2018 (after serving 14 years), the glittering narrative follows the efforts of George H.W. Bush to bring down Los Muchachos, Falcon’s friendships with notorious figures including Pablo Escobar and Manuel Noriega, and his downfall after a 1999 federal indictment. Though the narrative sprawls in places, it moves at a brisk clip, with all the glamor and betrayal of top-notch crime fiction. Readers will be rapt. Agent: Nat Sobel, Sobel Weber Assoc.

    • Kirkus

      November 15, 2024
      Raucous, sprawling account of Los Muchachos, the group credited with perfecting cocaine importation. English, a journalist and bestselling author, looks to offer an accurate take on what is an oft-exaggerated underground history, noting, "My goal with this book has been to provide an account primarily from those who did not cooperate with the government." He capably manages a complicated tale that ranges across numerous countries and a rogue's gallery of cops and smugglers, some notorious like Pablo Escobar, others restrained and innovative. English writes, "The Narcosphere is not a physical place; it is a realm of operation, and a state of mind. It spans sovereign boundaries, physical space, borders, and political jurisdictions." Based primarily on interviews with charismatic gang founder Willy Falcon, who recently finished a 27-year sentence, his epic narrative suggests that the refugees who fled Cuba for Florida following the Communist revolution proved crucial in the explosion of cocaine trafficking. At first, Falcon and his neighborhood friends were covertly encouraged as a means of raising money for anti-Castro efforts, but "what had started as an effort to assist those who hoped to kill the bearded dictator and liberate Cuba was about to become the white powder avalanche that changed America." Falcon's circle created a rationalized system for transporting large loads of cocaine, by cultivating close personal relationships with cartels in Colombia and, later, Mexico. They relied on numerous innovations, including short-wave radio communication and building airstrips on ranches in rural Florida, and lived as fugitives for several years when in 1987 the DEA eventually pursued indictments. English captures vividly the sleazy ambiance of the traffickers' glory years and law enforcement's efforts to comprehend an enterprise that, English argues, transformed Miami as a city, once narcos "began funneling money into Miami real estate." Engrossing true crime, with a rueful undertone of how perniciously the drug war affected the United States.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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