Narcofiant sues Netflix: She was a serial with my story.

A Mexican woman who spent several years in prison for her connections to drug trafficking has filed a lawsuit against Netflix and Telemto television channel. Sandra Avila Beltran claims that the television series “The South Queen” is based on her life and that history has been used without her consent and that [...]
Sandra Avila Beltran claims that the television series “The South Queen” is based on her life and that history has been used without her consent and therefore requires 40% of her income earned.
Avila Beltran was notorious in Mexico even before the broadcast of Netflix series. Known as the “Queen of the Pacific”, her life story certainly looks like a very unexpected soap opera scenario.
Her uncle is Miguel Angel Felix Gallardo, one of the founders of the mighty drug cartel in Guadalcanal.
At the age of 21, she married a policeman who allegedly became corrupt and traded with local drug bosses. He was killed shortly after their son was born.
The second man, a narcotics police officer, was killed by an armed commando who entered the hospital room where he was laid down after an operation. He was also thought to be linked to drug cartels.
But it was her relationship with Colombian drug boss Juan Diego Espinosa who caused her to get into trouble with the law.
Espinosis and Avila Beltran were arrested in Mexico City in 2007, but they were images of the woman's arrest where she appeared elegantly dressed and smiling on cameras that featured headlines.
Even while she was in prison, she managed to make news and maintain her beauty routine by paying a doctor to get into a cell for botox injections.












