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The bizarre true story of the Cocaine Bear who ate a sack of coke that dropped from plane as smuggler fell to death

SLICING open the stomach of the 175lb black bear in front of them, the team of pathologists weren’t expecting to find millions of pounds worth of cocaine.

The bear had gobbled up and overdosed on a staggering 75lbs of the powder which it found, strangely, in the middle of the Chattahoochee National Forest in Georgia, USA.

Kentucky For Kentucky

Cocaine Bear, also affectionately referred to as Pablo Esco-bear, was stuffed and is now on display as a tourist attraction in Kentucky[/caption]

The discovery of the overdosed bear was quickly linked to an even stranger case that happened three months earlier – when a drug smuggler strapped up with $15m of cocaine fell from the sky.

Andrew Thornton II, an ex-narcotics cop and lawyer, was found dead on a driveway in Tennessee with a failed parachute on his back.

The 40-year-old was carrying thousands in cash and two pistols, and he was wearing night vision goggles, a bulletproof vest, and Gucci loafers on his feet.

Investigators later discovered he’d jumped from a plane that he’d also been using to drop duffel bags of cocaine – one of which the bear found.

Findagrave.com

Andrew Thornton was a former drug cop and paratrooper turned smuggler who died in a dramatic smuggling run gone wrong[/caption]

“Its stomach was literally packed to the brim with cocaine,” the medical examiner who looked at the bear told the owners of Kentucky for Kentucky, a shop which promotes the state.

“There isn’t a mammal on the planet that could survive that. Cerebral haemorrhaging, respiratory failure, hyperthermia, renal failure, heart failure, stroke. You name it, that bear had it.”

Cocaine Bear, who’d eaten one of the bags Thornton chucked from his plane, is the stuff of local legend – and now the incredible story is being made into a film to be directed by Scrubs star Elizabeth Banks.

These are the incredible events that led up to the mysterious death of a drug smuggler and a black bear 100 miles away.

Deadly fall

Thornton was in the final stages of a smuggling run when he met his spectacular end.

Flying from Colombia, Thornton was dropping packages of cocaine from the plane over Georgia.

He then jumped himself with the rest strapped to his waist – the abandoned aircraft was left on autopilot and it smashed into a mountainside in North Carolina.

PA:Press Association

A Cessna 404 like the one Thornton used on his smuggling run[/caption]

According to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, Thornton “hit his head on the tail of the aircraft” as he jumped and failed to open his parachute as he plunged to the ground.

Cops thought he was planning to meet someone when he landed, and investigators retracing his plane’s flightpath eventually found nine duffel bags of cocaine.

But they were beaten to the tenth.

Cocaine Bear legend

Three months after Thornton’s fall, the black bear that did find the tenth duffel bag was discovered dead in the Chattahoochee National Forest.

The medical examiner gave the carcass to a taxidermist friend who stuffed the bear, and it went on display at a visitor centre in the forest.

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The stuffed bear was once displayed in a Chinese medicine shop, but is now in Kentucky for Kentucky’s store[/caption]

When a wildfire swept through the forest in the 90s, employees at the centre saved the bear and some of their other treasures from the flames by putting it in storage.

But it was stolen and sold to a pawn shop – which in turn sold it to country music legend Waylon Jennings.

He gave it to a friend and, when the friend died, it was bought for $200 at an auction of his estate.

The buyer, Zhu T’ang, ran a Chinese medicine shop in Reno, Nevada, where the bear stood as a decoration.

AP:Associated Press

Bricks of cocaine in Colombia – the country Thornton flew from on his smuggling run[/caption]

Getty – Contributor

Waylon Jennings owned Cocaine Bear for a while after it was sold to a pawn shop[/caption]

“At first, he wanted to keep it in our living room but I wouldn’t have it,” Zhu’s widow told Kentucky for Kentcuky.

“It scared me. I made him take it to the store.”

Zhu had no idea about the bear’s wild cocaine history, nor did his widow, who sold the bear to Kentucky for Kentucky’s owners when they tracked it down.

To this day, Cocaine Bear is on display at the Fun Mall in Lexington, Kentucky, as a tourist attraction today.

‘Efficient killer’ narco cop

Thornton’s blue-blooded background probably isn’t typical of your average international cocaine smuggler.

He was born into a wealthy family of thoroughbred horse trainers in Kentucky and was educated at private schools, and he served as a paratrooper in the Dominican Republican.

Getty Images – Getty

Elizabeth Banks is signed on to direct the film about Cocaine Bear[/caption]

It was after the military that he joined the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Police Department in 1968, eventually becoming a member of its narcotics squad, and he took night classes to train as a lawyer.

A Drug Enforcement Administration who worked with Thornton on narcotics investigations in the 70s called him a “007 paramilitary type personality” and “an adventurer driven by adrenaline rushes” who eventually got bored with police work, the Washington Post reports.

He was a trained warrior – a very efficient killer trained by the U.S. government


Betty Zairing on Thornton

“He was a trained warrior – a very efficient killer trained by the U.S. government,” Betty Zairing said, who was married to Thornton between 1968-1970.

“He went onto the police force so he could do battle. He was happiest when he was on the cutting edge, when he tested himself.”

Cannabis conspiracy

Thornton handed in his gun and badge in 1977 – but he didn’t leave his life of action behind.

He joined a private security firm setup by his pal Bradley Bryant, which ultimately drew Thornton to the wrong side of the law.

Reuters

Thornton was accused of flying a plane filled with cannabis in a drug conspiracy[/caption]

In 1981, he was charged with piloting a plane filled with tonnes of marijuana as part of a huge drug importing conspiracy and he became a fugitive for several months until he was caught.

Three days before he was due to appear in court, in 1982, he was shot twice in the chest at close range leaving a restaurant.


But the rounds didn’t penetrate the bulletproof vest he was wearing and cops concluded the shooting was staged to persuade the judge his life would be in danger if he was jailed.

He was sentenced to six months for the cannabis conspiracy – but it didn’t deter him from his drug dealing operations which ultimately led to his death.

It’s not yet clear what aspects of the bear or Thornton’s story will be covered in Banks’ forthcoming film – but it’s bound to be dramatic.