

The book Drug Lord by investigative journalist Terrance Poppa, chronicles the rise and fall of Acosta Villarreal through direct interviews he did with this drug lord. Pablo Acosta Villarreal was a Mexican smuggler who was a part of the Guadalajara cartel, and operated in Ojinaga.Bacon yes, who is the daughter of Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick plays Mimi Webb. Rafael Aguilar Guajardo took Acosta's place but he was killed soon after by Amado Carrillo Fuentes, who took control of the organization. When Pablo Acosta Villarreal was born on 26 January 1937, in Santa Elena, Manuel Benavides, Chihuahua, Mexico, his father, Cornelio Acosta Hinojos. According to actor Sosie Bacon, Narcos: Mexico Season 2 is partly a love story. A Pablo Acosta Villarreal se le recuerda como uno de los iniciadores del tráfico de drogas a gran escala.He established contacts with Colombians who wanted to smuggle cocaine into the United States using the same routes to Texas Acosta Villarreal was using to ship marijuana and heroin from across the border in Chihuahua.Acosta Villarreal was killed in April 1987, as detailed in the documentary film American Federale, during a cross-border raid into the Rio Grande village of Santa Elena, Chihuahua, by Mexican Federal Police helicopters, with assistance from the FBI.

While at first he only managed marijuana and heroin, Acosta Villarreal became increasingly involved in the cocaine trade near the end of his life. Pablo Acosta Villarreal, también conocido como El Zorro de Ojinaga fue un contrabandista y narcotraficante mexicano que controló el tráfico de drogas en aproximadamente poco más de 300 kilómetros de la frontera entre los Estados Unidos y México.Through a protection scheme with Mexican federal and state police agencies and with the Mexican army, Acosta was able to ensure the security for five tons of cocaine being flown by turboprop aircraft every month from Colombia to Ojinaga -sometimes landing at the municipal airport, sometimes at dirt airstrips on ranches upriver from Ojinaga.Chains of luxurious restaurants and hotels laundered his drug money.He was the mentor and business partner of Amado Carrillo Fuentes, the so-called 'Lord of the Skies', who took over after Acosta's death.He made his operation base in the once little dusty border town of Ojinaga, Chihuahua, Mexico, and had his greatest power in the period around 1984-1986.At the height of his power, he was smuggling 60 tons of cocaine per year for the Colombians -in addition to the incalculable amounts of marijuana and heroin that were the mainstay of his business.Pablo Acosta Villarreal, commonly referred to as El Zorro de Ojinaga ("The Ojinaga Fox") was a Mexican narcotics smuggler who controlled crime along a two-hundred mile stretch of U.S.-Mexico border.
