The Shocking Demise of a Cocaine-Consuming Black Bear
A 200-pound black bear met a tragic end in 1985 after ingesting a massive quantity of cocaine from a botched drug smuggling operation. The incident, which unfolded during a turbulent period known as the Bluegrass Conspiracy, involved an airplane loaded with pure Colombian cocaine. Officials later confirmed the bear had consumed around 90 pounds of the substance, leading to its swift death.
Details of the Drug Drop and Pilot’s Fate
Andrew Thornton, a former narcotics officer who had turned to drug trafficking, piloted the aircraft from Colombia toward the United States. During the flight, he parachuted out over Chattahoochee National Forest, dropping 40 plastic containers filled with cocaine valued at approximately $15 million. Thornton perished when his parachute tangled, causing him to plummet to his death in Knoxville, Tennessee.
Investigators tracing the flight path discovered the scattered containers, many of which had burst open. Amid the debris, they found the lifeless black bear, its body ravaged by the effects of the drugs. No signs indicated the bear had engaged in aggressive or destructive behavior prior to its death, and only a fraction of the cargo appeared to have been consumed or lost.
Autopsy Reveals Devastating Health Impacts
The medical examiner who conducted the necropsy described the scene vividly. “Its stomach was literally packed to the brim with cocaine. There isn’t a mammal on the planet that could survive that,” the examiner stated. Further details highlighted the severity: “Cerebral haemorrhaging, respiratory failure, hyperthermia, renal failure, heart failure, stroke. You name it, that bear had it.”
Following the examination, the bear’s body underwent taxidermy preservation. It changed hands several times, including a stint with country music icon Waylon Jennings, before local efforts tracked it down. Now affectionately called Pablo EscoBear or Snow Bear, the preserved specimen resides at the Kentucky Fun Mall in Lexington, where visitors continue to view it decades later.
Broader Scope of the Trafficking Operation
Authorities linked Thornton to a larger network that smuggled 880 pounds of cocaine into the U.S. Additional bags of drugs were recovered in rural areas of Georgia and Tennessee, underscoring the scale of the operation. The bear’s story has since inspired cultural works, including a recent film and a television program exploring its final, chaotic moments.

