Mexico's Queen of the Pacific sues Netflix over series

 A Mexican lady who spent time in jail in prison for her connects to medicate dealing is suing Netflix and TV station Telemundo.


Sandra Ávila Beltrán contends that the TV series Queen of the South depends on her life, her legal advisor told the Mexican paper Milenio.


Ávila Beltrán says her story was utilized without her assent and is requesting that she be paid 40% of the eminences.


As well as the TV series, there have been narco ditties expounded on her by Tigres del Norte and different groups.


Ávila Beltrán, 61, was scandalous in Mexico even before the Netflix series was communicated.


Known as Queen of the Pacific, her biography surely peruses like the content of a telenovela - the colossally famous Latin American dramas with many unexpected developments and turns.


Her uncle is Miguel Ángel Félix Gallardo, one of the organizers behind the strong Guadalajara drug cartel.


At 21, she wedded a police officer who purportedly became bad and did manages the neighborhood drug rulers. He was killed not long after their child was conceived.


Her subsequent spouse, a counter-opiates cop, was killed by an outfitted commando who raged the clinic room in which he was recuperating after a medical procedure. He, as well, was remembered to have had connections to tranquilize cartels.


However, it was her relationship with Colombian medication master Juan Diego Espinosa that crossed paths with the law.


Espinosa and Ávila Beltrán were kept in Mexico City in 2007 yet it was the recording of Ávila Beltrán's capture, showing her exquisitely dressed and grinning resistant into the camera, that stood out as truly newsworthy.


Indeed, even while in jail, she actually figured out how to make news and keep up her magnificence standard, paying a specialist to come into her cell to give her Botox infusions.


She was ultimately removed to the US where she confessed to the lesser allegation of helping Espinosa.

Sandra Ávila BeltránIMAGE SOURCE,SHUTTERSTOCK
Image caption,
Sandra Ávila Beltrán was arrested in 2007 but has been free since 2015

After a resulting tax evasion sentence was tossed out by a Mexican appointed authority in 2015, Ávila Beltrán has been free and residing in her nation of origin.


Seven years on, still up in the air to get a portion of the eminences she accepts are because of her.


In authoritative reports seen by Milenio she denounces Netflix and Telemundo, which co-created the series, of involving her picture without her assent for their benefit.


Her legal advisor contends that the person depicted by Kate del Castillo in the series depends on his client and that she is expected 40% of the sovereignties.

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