Pablo joins his fingers and brings them up to his lips before opening them and blowing a kiss into the air. That is his immediate response when asked about his thoughts, as a 55 year-old man, of his first sea crossing aboard the 'Laion' ship on September 10. Pablo has brain damage, and that prevents him from walking, speaking fluently and controlling his movements precisely.

The 13 meters long sailboat, with two masts and the capacity to sail around the world, is confiscated vessel from drug trafficking . Since 2002, when it was transferred by the state, it has been used so that people with disabilities like Pablo have the opportunity to navigate the Camariñas estuary from the port of Muxía, in Galicia. Before being an alternative for people with disabilities to navigate, the 'Laión' was the tool that drug trafficker Manuel Fariña Dacuña used to move drug shipments from the American continent to Europe, which in the 80s and 90s had one of its main entrance doors through Galicia.

The sailboat's drug voyages ended in 1998 in the Azores , when it was intercepted by the Spanish Civil Guard led by the then judge of the National Court, Baltasar Garzón. During the nineties, Garzón led a judicial offensive against drug trafficking clans, especially in Galicia, with one of the most notorious judicial actions of that time, Operation Nécora , which resulted in prison sentences for 19 drug traffickers . From moving cargo in the Atlantic to sailing along the estuary so tha.