Drug smuggler George Jung who inspired Johnny Depp's blow dies aged 78


Cocaine smuggler George Jung who was known as El Americano and inspired Johnny Depp’s Blow film dies aged 78 after battling liver and kidney failure

  • George Jung, the notorious cocaine smuggler, died at his home in Boston on Wednesday morning where he was receiving hospice care 
  • His cause of death was not immediately known but he had recently been battling liver and kidney failure 
  • Jung was often referred to as El Americano and ‘Boston George’ because of where he was from 
  • He was a notorious drug smuggler who ended up spending more than 20 years of his life in prison 
  • Jung was responsible for more than 85 percent of the cocaine smuggled into America in the 1970s and 1980s
  • He inspired Johnny Depp’s 2001 cult classic film Blow 

George Jung, the drug trafficker known as El Americano who inspired Johnny Depp’s film Blow, has died aged 78.  

The notorious cocaine smuggler died at his home in Boston on Wednesday morning where he was receiving hospice care. 

His cause of death was not immediately known but he had recently been battling liver and kidney failure, sources told TMZ.

Jung, who was often referred to as El Americano and ‘Boston George’ because of where he was from, died with his girlfriend Ronda and friend Roger by his side. 

He was a notorious drug smuggler who ended up spending more than 20 years of his life in prison and was responsible for more than 85 percent of the cocaine smuggled into America in the 1970s and 1980s. 

George Jung, the drug trafficker known as El Americano who inspired Johnny Depp's film Blow, died aged 78 at his home in Boston on Wednesday morning

George Jung, the drug trafficker known as El Americano who inspired Johnny Depp’s film Blow, died aged 78 at his home in Boston on Wednesday morning

Jung was part of the infamous Medellin drug cartel and supplied the United States with 80 percent of its cocaine in the 1980s

Jung was part of the infamous Medellin drug cartel and supplied the United States with 80 percent of its cocaine in the 1980s

‘I was a guy who had a lot of money and unlimited access to cocaine and even if I looked like Bela Lugosi I still had the most beautiful women on the planet because everybody at that time, especially women, were in love with cocaine and of course in love with the money… the access to the automobiles, the clothes, the dinners, the lifestyle,’ he told PBS in a 2000 interview.

‘Basically I was no different than a rock star or a movie star. I was a coke star.’

Jung first entered the drug underworld in the 1960s selling marijuana.

He was sent to prison in 1974 for smuggling 660 pounds of marijuana. It was during this stint in prison that he met Carlos Ledher, who facilitated his entry into cocaine trafficking and eventually became his long-time business partner. 

Lehder introduced Jung to the Medellín Cartel, while Jung taught Lehder how to smuggle. 

The two earned millions of dollars together. 

He was convicted again in 1994 after being caught with more than 1,700 pounds of cocaine in Kansas. 

Jung was released from New Jersey's FCI Fort Dix prison in 2014 after serving 20 years for drug trafficking. He had been caught with more than 1,700 pounds of cocaine in Kansas

Jung was released from New Jersey’s FCI Fort Dix prison in 2014 after serving 20 years for drug trafficking. He had been caught with more than 1,700 pounds of cocaine in Kansas 

Jung, who was often referred to as El Americano and 'Boston George' because of where he was from, died with his girlfriend Ronda and friend Roger by his side. George and Ronda are pictured above together in 2018

Jung, who was often referred to as El Americano and ‘Boston George’ because of where he was from, died with his girlfriend Ronda and friend Roger by his side. George and Ronda are pictured above together in 2018

He was initially sentenced to 60 years after pleading guilty to three counts of conspiracy but had his time dramatically reduced in exchange for testifying against Ledher. 

During that stint in FCI Fort Dix in New Jersey, Jung met with Johnny Depp as he prepared to portray him in the 2001 cult classic ‘Blow’.  

‘It’s very rare in life that any person opens up their heart and soul to you with unlimited access to their most profound thoughts, dreams, fears, regrets, intimacies,’ Depp wrote in a letter regarding his visit to Jung.

‘Even more rare when you’ve just met that person and, because of the obvious predicament, it’s highly unlikely that you will be spending too much time with them in the near future. So for this and more, I owe a great debt of gratitude to George.’ 

Jung was released from his stint in prison in 2014 when he was 71 years old. 

He met with Depp again following his release after the Hollywood star, who was then engaged to Amber Heard, reportedly Depp reached out and invited him to his loft in downtown Los Angeles.  

Jung ended up being the inspiration behind Johnny Depp's 2001 cult classic film 'Blow'

Johnny Depp playing George Jung

Jung ended up being the inspiration behind Johnny Depp’s 2001 cult classic film ‘Blow’. Jung is pictured on the left, while Depp is pictured right portraying Jung in the film

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