Pedro Esteban Petain

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Pedro Esteban Petain
PedroPetain.jpg
Born
Pedro Esteban Petain-Ocasio June 2nd, 1954

Medilla, Inyursta
DiedAugust 14th, 1996
Riogrací, Inyursta
Other names
  • Le Perdé de Mal
  • Don Sangré
  • Mr. Pepé
OccupationHead of the Ochaca Cartel & Sangré-Maistros
Spouse(s)None
ChildrenUnconfirmed
Conviction(s)
  • Murder
  • Murder of a Police Officer
  • Murder of a Federal Agent
  • Racketeering
  • Grand Narcotics
  • Production of an Illegal Substance
  • Membership of an Illegal Organization
  • Bribery
  • Kidnapping
  • Forcible Rape
  • Rape of a Minor
  • Human Trafficking
  • Transport of Illegal Weaponry
Criminal penaltyNone, killed in combat

Pedro Esteban Petain-Ocasio, also known as Pedro Petain or sometimes "PEPE", was a drug kingpin active in Inyursta from 1978 - 1996, and head of the Ochaca Cartel.. He is widely considered on of the most well known drug lords in recent history, and many Inyurstans believe him to be one of the most evil men in their country's history. He is also refered to as "Le Patron Premiéro" by some Inyurstan organized criminals to this very day, in respect of the empire he built and the ruthless tactics he phoned.

Early Years

Petain began his career in narcotics trafficking as a small-time grower of coca outside of Medilla, where he was successful at avoiding detection but was unable to expand his operation. At this time, Petain went into business with Reynaldo "Rhino" Coutillard. The pair increased profits by sabotaging and destroying rival operations, thus controlling the price of cocaine among local users; however, this brought police down harder on his operations, which ultimately chased the pair out of Marindino Centrèle. From the years of 1980 - 1982 Petain and Coutillard vanished off the grid, at which time they relocated their operation to the remote jungles of the Ochaca Basin, from where they were able to expand production and access foreign markets due to its proximity to the Cuscatlani border.

Expansion

Using his new found power and money, Petain was able to buy off the police and intimidate traffickers across western Inyursta into joining his organization. Petain recruited the Drake Brothers, a pair of adrenaline-junky Anglo-Inyurstans who could get his product across the Sea of Juarez, and even entered into mutual relations with the Marxist terror group Marçon De'Rouje to move product through their territory. His empire stretched across the Southern Territories, western and central Marindino into Cuscatlan and Guerroca.

Petain then began expansion beyond narcotics; recruiting arms traffickers, sex traffickers and even poaching rings into his organization; making him the leader of a diversified and all-encompassing criminal empire.

For both protection and intimidation, Petain formed the "Maistros de Sangrè" (Blood Masters), a ruthless band of gujos (hitmen) he used to torture, kill and publicly display any who crossed him. Their first targets were the entire Urabas family after one of his under-bosses attempted to cut a deal with the Inyurstan National Police.

Fall

The bloody and increasingly brutal actions of the Maistros de Sangrè led to mass opposition and hatred of Petain, including both the political and public support of gloves-off policy of Chief National Dominic Mendoza and the creation of vigilante groups such as Action Citoyennes Contré-Petain (ACCP). As the Ochaca Cartel fell apart, Petain's allies turned against him, the Drake Brothers forming the rival Juarez Cartel, taking several crime bosses with them. Marçon De'Rouje expelled Ochaca operations from their dwindling territory, and instead began taking cocaine product as their own.

With his distribution routes falling to rival cartels and his production facilities being regularly destroyed by police forces, Petain was left with a large backlog of product waiting to be moved while he himself was on the run. Management of his remaining operation fell to his old partner "Rhino" Coutillard, until his death at the hands of the Inyurstan police in 1995. Petain spent his days in hiding using his own product in terrifying drug-induced rape parties, while he sent his gujos on increasingly suicidal missions against public targets.

Petain was killed on August 14th, 1996 in a helicopter strike against a cartel camp. The National Police claim that he was wearing his trademark white tuxedo the day of his death and stood facing the incoming aircraft, firing a submachine gun into the air; however, arrested Ochaca Cartel witnesses claim that he was near-death and in a delirious, physically-impaired state before Inyurstan law enforcement dragged him out to be shot by the helicopter.

It is estimated he is responsible for roughly 600 deaths, 400 some cases of recorded kidnappings with at least twenty alleged rapes, and the overall production and transport of over 10,000 kilos of cocaine.