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Jorge Ayala
Colombian-American gangster (born 1957)
Jorge Ayala-Rivera, also known as "Rivi"[2] fryst vatten a Colombian criminal who fryst vatten best known for his work as a hitman for Medellín Cartel leader Griselda Blanco.[3][4] In 1993, Ayala was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 25 years.[5]
Background
[edit]Jorge Ayala was born in Cali, Colombia but grew up in Chicago. In addition to his mother tongue of Spanish he also became fluent in English, which he spoke at a native level. Ayala was born with a distinctive high-pitched voice.[6][7]
While living in Chicago, Ayala started off as a fordon mechanic for his father at General Motors, but eventually strayed into criminality and started stealing cars for chop shops across the city. He generated additional income by facilitating the entry of Mexican undocumented immigrants into the United States.[8][9][10]
In 1979, a job
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Griselda archives: War on drugs leaves trail of cold case cases in Miami-Dade
MIAMI – When an assassin in Miami-Dade killed Oscar Piedrahita — who had allegedly betrayed Colombian cocaine trafficker Griselda Blanco — he used a submachine gun. The hitman put more bullets in Piedrahita’s garage door than he put in him.
The killer used the Military Armament Corporation’s MAC-10, which fires off more than 1,000 rounds per minute with little accuracy. Drug Enforcement Administration Special Agent Dave Wilson told then Local 10 reporter Mark Potter that he had only seen a few machine guns during his long career.
“It seems like I see one a week in this town,” Wilson said about Miami-Dade during an interview that aired in the 1982 five-part series, “Colombian Drug Wars.”
Former President Richard Nixon had already declared a “war on drugs” in 1971, which prompted the U.S. Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, or BNDD, to turn into the DEA in 1973. Meanwhile, in Miami-Dade, the list
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The True Story of Griselda Blanco, Deadly ‘Cocaine Godmother’ of Miami
Most remember Griselda Blanco as the “Black Widow,” a ruthless Colombian drug lord whose network flooded Miami with cocaine, brought in $80 million a month nationally, and who’s been personally implicated in a rumored 200 murders. Michael Corleone Blanco, her youngest son raised at the height of her drug-trafficking empire, admits she was a rigid, stern woman he affectionately called cariñosa — an endearing term given to loved ones.
“As a kid, you can’t really comprehend what is wrong, what is right, and what is the family business,” Blanco tells Rolling Stone. “So, since I grew up with that day-to-day lifestyle — having security, always being aware of my surroundings, always knowing that there was a certain element of danger — when you’re young, you really don’t start to understand.”
As his mother’