From InSight Crime <[email protected]>
Subject Weekly InSight | A Year of Challenge and Change
Date December 17, 2021 1:35 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
In our last newsletter of 2021, we look back at a year that challenged the resiliency of criminal groups and legal actors alike.

Weekly InSight
December 17, 2021 ([link removed])

View in your browser ([link removed])
In our last newsletter of 2021, we look back at a year that challenged the resiliency of criminal groups ([link removed]) and legal actors alike. Our annual GameChangers ([link removed]) series, starting from Dec. 22, will review how organized crime continued to evolve ([link removed]) , from Ecuador’s ([link removed]) prisons to Haiti’s ([link removed]) street gangs. InSight Crime has also been incredibly touched by the continued support of our readers and donors. Expect even deeper and wider coverage in 2022, starting with an investigation showing how Venezuela’s ([link removed]) President Nicolás Maduro sits atop a meticulously constructed criminal empire, to be published in late January.
On the news front this week, InSight Crime looks at how El Salvador’s gangs sent a bloody message to President Nayib Bukele over backdoor negotiations to lower homicides – negotiations that have since led the US to impose sanctions on two Bukele administration officials. We also delve into Haiti’s role in the international cocaine trade after an explosive New York Times report that President Jovenel Moïse was compiling a list of top drug traffickers just before he was assassinated.

In other news, Mexican cartels are finding a foothold in Canada; Indigenous communities in Brazil are struggling to save the world’s largest freshwater fish from poachers; and the sons of former Panama President Ricardo Martinelli are likely cooperating with US prosecutors after pleading guilty to money laundering charges related to the Odebrecht graft case.


** Featured
------------------------------------------------------------
[link removed]


** El Salvador's Gangs Send a Message in Blood ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------

Though El Salvador stands on track for another record low in homicides this year, the country was recently shaken by a three-day killing spree, a bloody reminder that its newfound peace could be easily shattered.

During a 72-hour period from November 9 to 11, El Salvador tallied 46 homicides. On the second day of bloodshed, 22 people were killed, the worst daily death toll this year, La Prensa Gráfica reported.

Read the analysis > ([link removed])


** NewsAnalysis
------------------------------------------------------------
All News ([link removed]) >
[link removed]


** Did Anti-Drug Crusade Lead to Haiti President's Killing? ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------
An explosive new report suggests that the high-profile assassination of Jovenel Moïse may have been related to a crackdown on drug trafficking...

[link removed]


** How Mexican Cartels Settled in Canada ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------
The story of the Mexican cartels and their influence abroad has mostly focused on the United States. But a number of Mexican groups have headed farther north, embedding...

Colombian Prosecutors Dismiss Memo Fantasma Libel Case Against InSight Crime Director ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------
Sons of Former Panama President Plead Guilty in Odebrecht Investigation ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------
The Battle to Save Brazil's Freshwater Giant, the Arapaima ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------
Pins and Needles – How Credit Card Fraud Works in Latin America ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------
Haiti Gangs Profit from Targeting Religious Groups ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------
Peru's Anti-Corruption Crusade Grows Weaker ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------
Could US Anti-Violence Models Work in Latin America? ([link removed])


** Criminal Actors
------------------------------------------------------------
Profiles of some of the notable criminal personalities and groups that have marked this week.

Browse by country > ([link removed])
[link removed]


** Second Marquetalia ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------
The Second Marquetalia is a group made up of former FARC guerrillas who refused to...
[link removed]


** El Paisa ([link removed])
------------------------------------------------------------
Hernán Darío Velásquez, better known as "El Paisa," is a former guerrilla commander who had gone missing for...


** Media Mentions
------------------------------------------------------------
About Us ([link removed])
DECEMBER 10, 2021
IRISH DAILY MIRROR ([link removed])

[link removed]
"The internationally renowned InSight Crime think tank says Kinahan was one of the leaders of the super cartel that smuggled 33 tonnes of cocaine worth a massive €6.9 billion on the streets into Holland in 2018 alone — but it has now been broken up by the US Drugs Enforcement Administration."


** Impact
------------------------------------------------------------
What We do ([link removed])


** Investigation Earns Editor’s Pick Award
------------------------------------------------------------

An InSight Crime and Igarapé Institute ([link removed]) investigation mapping environmental crimes ([link removed]) and illicit actors in Colombia’s Amazon Basin was named one of the year’s best Latin America investigations ([link removed]) by the Global Investigative Journalism Network (GIJN ([link removed]) ). A global association of some 200 news outlets that includes InSight Crime, GIJN praised our investigation for uncovering the ways “illicit mining, logging, wildlife trafficking, land grabbing, and coca cultivation are leading to deforestation and biodiversity loss,” as well as the links between “legal and illegal sectors” and how local communities are co-opted by criminal
networks, generating “conflict and insecurity.”

See the full investigation > ([link removed])


** Our Trending Topics
------------------------------------------------------------
Browse by Country ([link removed])
ROMAÑA ([link removed])
HAITI ([link removed])
MS13 ([link removed])
US/MEXICO BORDER ([link removed])

============================================================
We go into the field to interview, report and investigate. We then verify, write and edit, providing the tools to generate real impact in fighting organized crime.
** SUPPORT OUR WORK ([link removed])
** DONATE TODAY ([link removed])
** Facebook InSight Crime ([link removed])
** Twitter InSight Crime ([link removed])
** LinkedIn InSight Crime ([link removed])
** Subscribe ([link removed])
** View past issues ([link removed])

InSight Crime is sponsored by:
** American University ([link removed])

** Open Society Foundations ([link removed])

** The Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency ([link removed])
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 ([link removed])
** update subscription preferences ([link removed])

This email was sent to [email protected] (mailto:[email protected])
why did I get this? ([link removed]) unsubscribe from this list ([link removed]) update subscription preferences ([link removed])
InSight Crime . Medellin . Medellin 0000 . Colombia
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: InSight Crime
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: n/a
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • MailChimp