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Pablo Escobar’s Hippos Spark a Battle Over Animal Rights in Colombia

Hippos at the Hacienda Napoles theme park, once the private zoo of Pablo Escobar at his Napoles ranch, in Doradal, Colombia. 

Photographer: Raul Arboleda/AFP/Getty Images
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When Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar was killed in 1993, he left officials with a unique problem that grows to nearly 4,000 pounds, claims hundreds of lives annually in its natural habitat, and has grabbed international attention after an Ohio federal court issued a ruling that animal activists still celebrate.

Escobar’s four hippopotamuses multiplied at his unattended estate, Hacienda Nápoles, located about 60 miles east of Medellín, Colombia. The hippos spread out and found a home in the nearby Magdalena River, and they now number nearly 100 with no clear obstacles in their path.