“Although Roberto was never as extravagant as his brother, he was accustomed to flying on private jets, and sent his children to a Swiss boarding school. Once, during an extended hike through the forest to elude capture, he threw a briefcase containing a hundred thousand dollars into a river, because it was heavy.” These days, Roberto Escobar has a more pedestrian lifestyle. He’s a guide in the increasingly popular industry of Pablo Escobar tourism. The New Yorker’s Jon Lee Anderson on The Afterlife of Pablo Escobar. He’s as popular as a tourist attraction as he was as a coke dealer. (But the margins aren’t nearly as good.)