A group of armed men stormed into a drug rehab facility in the city of Culiacán, Mexico, at around 2:00 in the morning on April 7, and rounded up the 20 or so individuals living there.The director of the center, which is located on a quiet residential street near a scenic overlook and a Catholic church, tried to reason with them. “We are people of God,” he pleaded. It did not matter. The attackers opened fire, executing eight of those present and injuring another who later died at a nearby hospital.One of the survivors said that many more would have been killed had the weapons used by the assailants not jammed. They eventually fled and forced the director out with them. Local authorities found his body the following day, dumped in another neighborhood on the south side of Culiacán.The New Rules of Engagement in Sinaloa’s Latest Crime Wars | Written by Parker Asmann and Victoria Dittmar, and read by Daniel Reyes. Visit insightcrime.org for more information.
Cerca de las 2 horas de la mañana del 7 de abril, un grupo de hombres armados irrumpió en un centro de rehabilitación de drogas en la ciudad de Culiacán, México, y reunió a las 20 personas que vivían allí.El director del centro, ubicado en una tranquila calle residencial cerca de un mirador y una iglesia católica, intentó razonar con ellos. “Somos gente de Dios”, suplicó. No sirvió de nada. Los atacantes abrieron fuego, ejecutaron a ocho personas e hirieron gravemente a otra que moriría, posteriormente, en un hospital cercano.Uno de los sobrevivientes aseguró que habrían muerto muchas más personas si algunas armas de los agresores no se hubieran encasquillado. Finalmente, los atacantes huyeron llevándose por la fuerza al director, cuyo cuerpo sería encontrado, por las autoridades locales, al día siguiente, abandonado en otro barrio del sur de Culiacán.Las nuevas reglas de juego en la última guerra criminal de Sinaloa | Escrito por Parker Asmann y Victoria Dittmar, y leído por Daniel Reyes. Visite insightcrime.org para más información.
Cinco años después del inicio de la pandemia de COVID-19, el crimen organizado adoptó nuevas estrategias y fortaleció su control sobre los territorios y las economías ilícitas en América Latina y el Caribe.Las cadenas de suministro del narcotráfico han cambiado, los grupos criminales han aprovechado la falta de oportunidades económicas para reclutar nuevos miembros, y la combinación de inseguridad y crisis económicas ha desatado una ola migratoria masiva que las estructuras criminales han explotado en su beneficio.InSight Crime analiza varias formas en que la pandemia ha impactado en el crimen organizado desde su inicio, hace cinco años atrás.Cinco años después, ¿cómo cambió la pandemia al crimen organizado en América Latina y el Caribe? | Escrito por Henry Shuldiner y leído por Daniel Reyes.Visite insightcrime.org para más información.
Five years after the COVID-19 pandemic began, organized crime in Latin America and the Caribbean has adopted new strategies and strengthened control over territories and illicit economies.Drug trafficking supply chains have shifted, criminal syndicates have capitalized on the lack of economic opportunities to recruit new members, and insecurity combined with economic crises has sparked a massive wave of migration that criminal groups have exploited to their advantage.InSight Crime analyzes several ways the pandemic has impacted organized crime since it began five years ago. 5 Years Later, How Has the Pandemic Changed Organized Crime in Latin America and the Caribbean? | Written and narrated by Henry Shuldiner.Visit insightcrime.org for more information.
Two weeks ago, we published what was supposed to be the final episode of The Shadow of El Dorado, our podcast series exploring the story of Segovia, a small mining town in Colombia tainted by blood gold. But while we were publishing the series, one of the people we had followed throughout our investigation, Jaime Gallego, was abducted, tortured, and murdered. As one of the leaders of the mesa minera – or mining roundtable – Jaime represented Segovia’s informal miners in their struggles with the Colombian government and the Canadian multinational that is the legal owner of Segovia’s gold. This work earned him at least 23 death threats, and, ultimately, would cost him his life. This week, we are launching a special episode to tell his story.
El descubrimiento de un campo de exterminio y trabajo forzado del Cartel Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG) ha generado luto nacional en México y evidencia las crueles tácticas del grupo criminal para reclutar miembros. El 24 de marzo, el secretario de Seguridad Ciudadana de México, Omar García Harfuch, anunció durante una conferencia de prensa que las autoridades habían detenido a alias “El Comandante Lastra”, un integrante del CJNG presuntamente responsable de actos de reclutamiento forzado.Campo de exterminio en México expone los horrores del reclutamiento forzado del CJNG | Escrito por Mariana Fernández y leído por Daniel Reyes.Visite insightcrime.org para más información.
The Trump administration’s decision to return a high-profile gang boss facing terrorism charges to El Salvador as part of a controversial effort to deport hundreds of Venezuelan citizens could signal the US government’s willingness to compromise its longstanding MS13 crackdown in favor of mass deportation.César Humberto López Larios, alias “Greñas,” a veteran leader of the MS13 street gang, was flown to El Salvador on March 15 alongside other suspected Salvadoran gang members and more than 200 Venezuelans accused by US officials of belonging to the Tren de Aragua gang.López Larios was among a group of 14 members of the MS13’s historic leadership ring charged with terrorism in a landmark case initiated during Trump’s first administration. At the time, authorities called it the “highest-reaching and most sweeping indictment” to ever target the gang.Could US Deportations Compromise Trump Administration’s MS13 Crackdown? | Written and narrated by Alex Papadovassilakis.Visit insightcrime.org for more information.
We head back to Segovia after several years away. Has the town been able to escape the blood gold cycle? ____This is the final episode of the series. If you’d like to explore past episodes, dive deeper into our investigation through related videos, interviews, documents, and photos, be sure to visit the podcast page. If you've already listened to the full series, we’d love to hear your thoughts—leave your comments below. Thanks for listening and supporting our work.
Tensions between informal miners and the Canadian multinational that is the legal owner of the town’s gold have been building ever since we first arrived in Segovia. And now that conflict is reaching breaking point.__Listen to the full series and explore additional content from the investigation here
Segovia goes into lockdown when a new gold war begins as Colombia’s broader conflict enters a new chapter. But is this an existential battle between legal and illegal, or is that just wartime propaganda?__This series follows reporters James Bargent and Mat Charles as they head to the Colombian town of Segovia, in search of the blood gold that contaminates global supply chains and ends up in the hands of everyday consumers. But what they find there challenges conventional understandings of conflict minerals as they expose how it is not only warlords and gangsters that grow rich from dirty gold, but also global political and business elites. We have some incredible additional content, which will take you right into the thick of the action, and allow you to explore this head-spinning story with the depth it deserves.Listen to the series and explore all the aditional content here