Book Details
Notorious Kingpins - Volume 1
Amado Carrillo Fuentes, Raymond Chow, Khun Sa
Amado
Carrillo
Fuentes
,
arguably
Mexico’s
biggest
drug
trafficker,
was
known
as
El
Señor
de
Los
Cielos
(Lord
of
the
Skies)
and
he
pioneered
the
use
of
jumbo
jets
for
the
mass
distribution
of
illicit
drugs
into
the
U.S.
He
seized
control
of
the
Juárez
Cartel
after
assassinating
his
boss
Rafael
Aguilar
Guajardo.
He
died
in
July
1997
in
a
Mexican
hospital
after
undergoing
extensive
plastic
surgery
to
change
his
appearance.
In
his
final
days
Carrillo
was
being
tracked
by
Mexican
and
U.S.
authorities.
He
is
regarded
as
one
of
the
wealthiest
criminals
in
history,
with an estimated net-worth of U.S. $25 billion
.
Raymond
Chow
Kwok-cheung
known
as
the
Shrimp
Man
,
is
a
Chinese
gangster
that
dominated
crime
in
the
Chinatown
of
San
Francisco.
Chow's
first
conviction
was
in
1978,
for
robbery
in
Chinatown,
San
Francisco.
Chow
received
an
11-year
sentence,of
which
he
served
7
years
and
4
months.
He
was
released
in
1985.
In
1986,
Chow
was
charged
with
28
counts
of
assault
with
a
deadly
weapon,
attempted
murder,
mayhem,
and
illegal
posses
-
sion
of
a
firearm.
He
served
three
years
in
prison
and
was
released
in
1989.
In
1992
Chow
was
arrested
for
racketeering,
later
separated
into
two
separate
trials.
The
first
was
for
ille
-
gal
gun
sales
and
the
second
was
for
prostitution,
drugs
and
money
laundering.
Convicted
in
1995,
Chow
was
sentenced
to
24
years.
When
Peter
Chong
was
captured,
Chow
became
an
informant,
turned
informer
on
his
old
boss,
testifying
against
him
in
exchange
for
a
reduced
sentence.
He
was
released
from
prison
in
2003.
In
1996,
Chow
was
tried
again
for
racketeering, but the indictment was dismissed.
Khun
Sa
also
known
as
Chang
Chi-fu
was
a
Burmese
War
Lord
and
perhaps
history’s
biggest
heroin
dealer
who
operated
out
of
Southeast
Asia.
He
was
a
Shan
warlord,
born
in
Hpa
Hpeung
village,
Burma.
He
was
also
dubbed
the
"Opium
King"
due
to
his
opium
trad
-
ing
in
the
Golden
Triangle.
As
a
War
Lord
he
commanded
the
Shan
United
Army
and
the
Mong
Tai
Army
.
He
made
offers
to
the
Australian
and
U.S.
DEA
for
them
to
buy
his
entire
heroin
crop
but
both
governments
refused.
He
was
indicted
by
the
U.S.
authorities
but
the
Burmese
officials
refused
to
extradite
him,
and
he
lived
the
rest
of
his
life
in
the
Rangoon
area living of his significant investments.
All three kingpins have impacted crime on an international level.