Weekly InSight
This week, InSight Crime launches an investigation on the trafficking of wildlife from four countries in the region. The series – conducted with American University's Center for Latin American and Latino Studies (CLALS) – uncovers the thriving trade in donkey skins from Colombia, the appetite for sea cucumbers poached from Honduras, the smuggling of Amazon river turtles in Peru, and the black market for reptile products in Mexico. Other notable reports from this week include an explainer on how Chinese brokers launder drug money for Mexico’s cartels; an analysis of how police brutality during Colombia’s national protests is undermining the legitimacy of the force; and a report on the trafficking of mercury used in illegal gold mining, which poisons

Featured

All Creatures Great and Small – Plundering Latin America’s Wildlife

Wildlife trafficking goes deeper than commonly understood.

Deeper under the sea in Honduras where sea cucumbers are fished by the ton to feed demand in Asia. Deeper into Colombia’s hinterlands where the donkey population has plummeted, their skins sold to make gelatin in China. Deeper into Peru’s turtle hatcheries and Mexico’s crocodile farms, where specimens intended to help restore populations in the wild are being trafficked all the same.

This investigative series was carried out in conjunction with American University’s Center for Latin American and Latino Studies (CLALS).

Read the investigation >

NewsAnalysis

How Chinese Criminals Secretly Move Millions for Mexico Cartels


While the involvement of Chinese money-laundering rings in handling drug proceeds from Mexico is nothing new, a number of recent... 

Dirty Business – The Smuggling Pipeline Carrying Mercury Across the Amazon


Smuggling networks are feeding illegal mining operations across the Amazon Basin with mercury...
Protests Shatter Already Fragile Image of Colombia’s Security Forces
Showdown Brewing Over Fate of Runaway Mexico Governor
Women Taking Bigger Role in Central America Extortion Schemes
Earthly Delights: Religious Groups and Money Laundering in Dominican Republic
Pandemic Spending Immunity Deepens El Salvador Corruption Concerns
Rage, Rinse, Repeat – The Futile Cycle of Anger at Rio’s Police
Texas Lawyer Sentenced for Shaking Down Colombia Drug Traffickers
5 Animals Used to Smuggle Drugs in Latin America

Criminal Actors

Profiles of some of the notable criminal personalities and groups that have marked this week.

Browse by country >

PCC

The First Capital Command (Primeiro Comando da Capital – PCC) was inspired by the Red Command (Comando Vermelho...

Red Command

The Red Command (Comando Vermelho) is Brazil’s oldest criminal group, created in a Rio de Janeiro prison in the...

Media Mentions

MAY 6, 2021
NTD



"You have to create a system of accountability that goes after the very corrupt elements within these governments. The people Biden put in place have the experience and ideas, but the bridge between that and actually doing something is long."

Co-director Steven Dudley on issues in Central America

Impact

Tracking Environmental Crime Networks

 
InSight Crime’s project manager for environmental crime investigations spoke about timber trafficking in a report by Efecto Naím, a weekly Spanish-language television news program broadcast in 20 countries and the United States. In a segment on the broad range of criminal activities that encompass environmental crime in the region, María Fernanda Ramírez discussed how fake documentation is used to move large quantities of illegal wood, devastating forests. As seen in our investigations on wildlife and timber trafficking, InSight Crime has made it a priority to track the interrelated criminal activities and networks driving habitat destruction and biodiversity loss in the region. 

Our Trending Topics 

COLOMBIA
ENVIRONMENTAL CRIME
ILLEGAL MINING
GENDER AND CRIME
Facebook InSight Crime
Twitter InSight Crime
LinkedIn InSight Crime
 


InSight Crime is sponsored by:

American University
Open Society Foundations
 

Copyright © 2021 InSight Crime, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you have signed up to receive InSight Crime's top weekly content.
unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences 






This email was sent to [email protected]
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
InSight Crime · Medellin · Medellin 0000 · Colombia