Gustavo Falcon's arrest Wednesday was more than a quarter-century in coming.He was indicted on drug-smuggling charges nearly 26 years ago to the day — along with his brother Augusto "Willie" Falcon, their partner Salvador "Sal" Magluta and several other accomplices. Authorities say that between the late 1970s and early '90s, their drug ring conspired to import and distribute about 75 tons of cocaine.Though Willie and Sal were eventually caught and convicted, Gustavo Falcon appeared to disappear entirely from South Florida."Nobody thought he was in the United States," U.S. Marshals Service spokesman Barry Golden said Wednesday, according to the Miami Herald; for years, law enforcement believed they had lost Falcon to Colombia or Mexico.That is, until last month, when officers discovered he'd been living in the Orlando area under an assumed identity for nearly two decades, together with his wife and two children. It would be another several weeks of watching Falcon's rental property in suburban Kissimmee before marshals felt comfortable enough to move on him — and even then, officers had to wait and watch while Falcon and his wife embarked on a 40-mile bike ride Wednesday.They finally stopped and arrested the pair at an intersection."We caught a break," Golden told CNN. "It was a lot of hard work, and some luck, and it paid off."The Herald breaks down some of the history behind the apprehension: