El Gatillero is often a child soldier. He is a product of systemic poverty, corrupt policing, and a war on drugs that has created a multi-billion-dollar shadow economy. He dies young, unmourned, usually anonymous. He is a ghost with a gun.
Songs from artists like or El Komander often paint the gatillero as a valiente (brave one)—a lone wolf who drinks whiskey, wears cowboy boots, and kills without a tremor. They sing of the cuerno de chivo as an extension of the man's soul. El Gatillero
Statistics from the Insight Crime foundation suggest that the average lifespan of an active gatillero from the time of their first confirmed hit is just 18 months to 3 years. They either end up in a mass grave, in prison, or rendered mentally broken. The world has a morbid fascination with El Gatillero . Latin pop culture, particularly the Narcocorrido (a subgenre of Mexican music), has glorified the trigger man. El Gatillero is often a child soldier
But the reality is a horror story.