Frank Sinatra was ‘a better cocaine dealer than singer’: Pablo Escobar's son makes extraordinary claim that the crooner was his drug lord father's business partner
- Sebastian Marroquin Frank Sinatra worked with his drug lord father
- Pablo Escobar was one of the most powerful Colombian cartel leaders
- Marroquin said he knew about the Sinatra link as he was close to his father
- Escobar was shot dead in shootout with Colombian police in Medellin
Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar's son has sensationally claimed singer Frank Sinatra was his dad's business partner.
Sebastian Marroquín described the legendary crooner as a 'better cocaine dealer than singer' in an interview with a Brazilian newspaper.
He said the American artist was one of his father's partners in Miami.
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Sebastian Marroquin, pictured, said he was aware of his father Pablo Escobar's link to Frank Sinatra
Escobar, right, was one of the world's biggest drug dealers, pictured with his son Sebastian, left
Frank Sinatra was widely believed to have links to the Mafia, but now it is claimed he worked with Colombians
Asked how he could be so sure of the truth of his extraordinary claims, Marroquin told respected newspaper O Estado de Sao Paulo: 'There are more singers than you can imagine that began their careers thanks to the sponsorship of drug traffickers.
'There are no receipts, just words. I know because I was very close to my father and he and his partners always spoke about that.'
He added: 'I can tell you that Sinatra was a better cocaine dealer than a singer. He was one of the partners of my father in Miami.
'Drugs cartels only exist below Mexico's border with the United States.
'Where is the Miami cartel? Or the New York cartel? Who is the head of the Chicago or Los Angeles cartels?
'Each kilo of cocaine that enters the United States is converted into eight with the help of poison. There's a great amount of hypocrisy when it comes to drugs.'
According to Marroquin, Sinatra, left, like many other singers was sponsored by drug dealers such as Escobar
Marroquin told respected newspaper O Estado de Sao Paulo of his father's links with Frank Sinatra
Marroquin, pictured with his father, was 17 when Colombian police shot dead his father in Medillen
Frank Sinatra's links to the Mafia have been well-publicised, although former 007 Roger Moore insisted last year the ties were exaggerated and were rumours based on unknown visitors having their picture taken with the singer in his dressing room.
A new Woody Allen biography published this week in the States claimed Sinatra asked the Mafia to murder the film director as revenge for betraying his ex-wife Mia Farrow.
Pablo Escobar's brother revealed in his 2009 book about the drugs trafficker that they once dined with Frank Sinatra 'on petty cash' during a holiday in Las Vegas.
Roberto Escobar said the dinner took place in a private room at Caesars Palace and afterwards they took a scenic helicopter tour together.
But he claimed in the book - 'The Accountant's Story' - that the American friend who introduced them told Sinatra the Escobars were real estate developers.
The meeting took place before Pablo, who at the height of his career supplied about eighty per cent of the cocaine smuggled into the US, became the name he is today.
'It was an honour for us,' Roberto said in the book.
'When I met him I actually had goose bumps, but I had to be cool to maintain my position.
'During dinner Pablo told Sinatra that we were going to make a helicopter tour the next day and Sinatra asked to come with us.
'The next day Frank Sinatra became our guide as we spent about an hour and a half flying all over the area.
'Supposedly, after Pablo became infamous our friend who had arranged this got a phone call from Sinatra.
'I've been watching TV', he said. 'Is that Pablo Escobar the guy we met in Las Vegas?'
'I don't know what happened after that, but I guess Sinatra said very firmly that he didn't want to be associated with Pablo. And until now he never has.'
Sebastian Marroquin is one of Pablo Escobar's two children.
The drugs lord died in a shootout on a rooftop in the Colombian city of Medellin after making a phone call to his son which enabled the authorities to track his location.
Sebastian, who was 17 at the time, fled with his mum and sister to Mozambique before emigrating to Argentina where they are now based.
He apologised to the sons of victims his late father ordered assassinated during a 2009 Argentine TV documentary.
He also wrote a best-selling book called 'Pablo Escobar: My Father' published last year using his birth name Juan Pablo Escobar instead of the alias he adopted before going on to study architecture.
The 38-year-old maintains his dad was not killed by police as Colombian authorities say, but committed suicide by shooting himself in the head.
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