Transnational Organized Crime
20 items across 6 editions · last active 6 Jul 26 · Subscribe (RSS)
The state of play updated 6 Jul 26
Foreign seizures continue to surface across the full contraband spectrum — cocaine in Hong Kong shipping containers, European ports, and Asian air routes, gold in Dhaka, and now a lithium-smuggling permit-fraud case out of Zimbabwe — while Mexican and Ecuadorian cartel networks (CJNG, Sinaloa, Los Choneros) and an OCCRP finding on gun-trafficking ties at Mexico City's airport remain the desk's dominant thread. A Polish organized-crime fugitive's capture at an Argentina-Brazil border crossing this week also points to regional land checkpoints, not just airports, increasingly catching INTERPOL-flagged suspects.
Forecast calls
No calls have matured here yet.
Open calls (1)
- due 21 Aug 26 De la Espriella (inaugurated 7 Aug) will begin his pledged 90-day military crackdown on armed groups within his first two weeks in office (by 21 Aug).
In the brief
No. 6 · Monday, 6 July 2026
Mexico City's main airport awarded security contracts to firms with alleged gun-trafficking ties
What? An OCCRP investigation published July 3 found Mexico City International Airport (AICM) awarded three-year security contracts in 2025 to SERPROSEP SA de CV and Armour King SA de CV. Co-owner Jorge Enrique Alberts Ponce had an arrest warrant issued against him in November 2025 — after the contracts began — for organized-crime offenses tied to hydrocarbon theft and firearms trafficking; wiretap evidence cited in the investigation allegedly shows him directing arms sales to buyers including a Gulf Cartel leader. AICM says it was unaware of the warrant when it signed the contracts, which run through the World Cup's peak stretch and an expected 5.5 million extra passengers.
So what? A vetting gap that let an organized-crime warrant slip past a security contractor at the hemisphere's busiest airport, mid-tournament, is exactly the kind of failure that erodes confidence in a partner's own risk-assessment pipeline; expect AICM's vendor-vetting process to become a quiet agenda item in the next bilateral security review, independent of whatever the World Cup itself produces.
Corroborated · Sources: OCCRP · Weekly Blitz (July 5, 2026)
No. 6 · Monday, 6 July 2026
Polish organized-crime fugitive "Matador" captured crossing into Argentina from Brazil
What? Piotr Kuliś, 42, known as "Matador," was arrested in mid-June at Puerto Iguazú, Misiones province, Argentina, while crossing from Brazil, after being matched to an Interpol Red Notice issued at a Katowice court's request. He is wanted in Poland on organized-crime-group participation charges plus kidnapping and hostage-taking allegations, linked by Polish press to a 2016 killing and a September 2025 abduction-murder case. He remains in Argentine custody; extradition proceedings are at an early stage.
So what? A European Red Notice fugitive tied to violent organized crime surfacing at a land border crossing between Brazil and Argentina, rather than an international arrivals hall, is a reminder that regional land-border checkpoints are increasingly where INTERPOL-flagged fugitives get caught once they assume airports draw the scrutiny; watch whether this case becomes a template for closer Argentine-Polish extradition cooperation on future European fugitives surfacing in the Southern Cone.
Corroborated · Sources: TVP World · Polsat News (July 5, 2026)
No. 6 · Monday, 6 July 2026
Hong Kong police seize HK$120M of cocaine hidden in tampered shipping containers
What? Hong Kong police raided a Yuen Long warehouse Friday night, catching three men cutting open two of three roughly 3-tonne heavy-metal containers lined with material meant to defeat X-ray scanning. Officers found 172 bricks of suspected cocaine, about 1kg each, valued at HK$120 million (roughly US$15.4 million). Three Pakistani nationals, aged 28 to 35, were arrested on suspicion of trafficking.
Corroborated · Source: South China Morning Post (July 5, 2026)
No. 5 · Sunday, 5 July 2026
Thai police seize 8 million meth pills hidden under two tons of cucumbers
What? A traffic stop after a pickup truck ran a red light and struck a motorcyclist in Kamphaeng Phet province led Thai police to 40 sacks of methamphetamine ("yaba") pills — 200,000 pills per sack, 8 million total — hidden beneath two tons of fresh cucumbers. Police arrested the driver, a 25-year-old Myanmar national who said he had been paid to move the truck from northern Thailand, and are now tracing the shipment's financing to identify the network behind it.
Single-source · Source: Chiang Rai Times (July 3, 2026)
No. 4 · Saturday, 4 July 2026
Slain Veracruz journalist's killers included four municipal police, prosecutors say
What? Veracruz state prosecutors confirmed July 3 that journalist Roxana Guzmán — abducted June 2 from her home in Nanchital and livestreamed during part of her own abduction — was murdered and her remains incinerated. Eight suspects have been detained, including four municipal police officers from Ixhuatlán del Sureste accused of providing logistics to the criminal cell responsible. She is the third journalist killed in Veracruz this year.
So what? Local police complicity in a targeted killing tied to organized crime is a direct measure of institutional capture in a state astride key Gulf trafficking corridors, and it argues for continued caution in vetting Mexican counterpart-agency personnel and information at the municipal level rather than assuming state-level reforms have reached local law enforcement.
Corroborated · Sources: Proceso · Reporters Without Borders (July 3, 2026)
No. 4 · Saturday, 4 July 2026
Burnaby RCMP seizes nearly seven tonnes of drugs and precursor chemicals in Richmond, B.C.
What? Following an April 1 raid on three homes and two shipping containers, Burnaby RCMP's Gang Enforcement Team disclosed this week it recovered 6,765 kg of finished narcotics (suspected methamphetamine, fentanyl, and oxycodone) and precursor chemicals, plus roughly $30,000 in cash, firearms including tactical shotguns, and a signal-jamming device.
Corroborated · Sources: Castanet · Richmond News (July 3, 2026)
No. 4 · Saturday, 4 July 2026
Ecuador captures "Churrón," alleged Los Choneros-Sinaloa cartel liaison
What? Ecuadorian forces captured Francisco Manuel Bermúdez Cagua, alias "Churrón," in a July 2 raid in northern Guayaquil after an eight-month intelligence operation; US prosecutors have named him a top Los Choneros leader and principal liaison to Mexico's Sinaloa Cartel, and Washington had offered a $5 million reward for his capture. He will be held at Ecuador's high-security El Encuentro prison.
So what? Removing the group's main Sinaloa liaison, on the heels of "Fito" Macías's 2025 extradition, continues to degrade Los Choneros' top leadership; whether a rival faction fills the Sinaloa-liaison role Churrón held is the signal to watch, since that would mean the cocaine pipeline through Ecuador's ports is adapting rather than shrinking.
No. 4 · Saturday, 4 July 2026
Italian finance police seize 340 kg of cocaine hidden in banana shipment from Colombia
What? Italy's Guardia di Finanza, supported by Genoa's economic-financial police and Customs Agency anti-fraud units, seized roughly 340 kg of cocaine — about 300 packages — concealed among plantains in a container shipped from Colombia to the port of Vado Ligure, with a street value estimated at €120 million.
Corroborated · Source: ANSA (July 3, 2026)
No. 4 · Saturday, 4 July 2026
Ireland's Criminal Assets Bureau cracks third 500-BTC wallet from decade-old drug case, 2026 total reaches 1,500 BTC
What? Ireland's Criminal Assets Bureau, working with Europol's European Cybercrime Centre, confirmed a third 500-bitcoin recovery (worth roughly $30-90 million depending on valuation) tied to convicted drug trafficker Clifton Collins, whose 6,000-bitcoin drug-proceeds stash — split across a dozen wallets — was long thought unrecoverable. Roughly 4,500 bitcoin, worth over $275 million at current prices, remains in still-dormant wallets.
Corroborated · Sources: The Block · Cointelegraph (July 3, 2026)
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No. 4 · Saturday, 4 July 2026
Drug gangs recruit Thai flight crew as couriers via TikTok and Facebook, Melbourne heroin bust exposes network
What? A Reuters investigation published July 3 details trafficking networks using fake TikTok and Facebook accounts to recruit Thai flight and cabin crew as couriers for small fees; the anchor case involves a Thai Airways flight attendant charged after more than 1 kg of heroin (worth roughly $347,000) was found concealed in tote-bag linings at Melbourne Airport, with investigators identifying five more staged packages moving Bangkok-Australia and Bangkok-Taiwan routes.
So what? Recruitment of airline crew — who face lighter scrutiny and repeat border access — through ordinary social-media platforms is a durable vulnerability in air-cargo and traveler-screening programs across Southeast Asia-Oceania routes; more airline-crew cases surfacing across other Southeast Asian carriers in the coming weeks would confirm this is a networked recruitment model rather than an isolated case.
Corroborated · Source: Reuters via Bangkok Post (July 3, 2026)
No. 3 · Friday, 3 July 2026
U.S. designates Ecuador's "Chone Killers" gang a foreign terrorist organization
What? The State Department designated Chone Killers — a splinter faction of the already-designated Los Choneros that has carried out assassinations of Ecuadorian officials and law-enforcement officers — as a Foreign Terrorist Organization and Specially Designated Global Terrorist on July 1. The move, part of a broader Trump administration campaign against Latin American organized crime, was welcomed by Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa's government.
So what? The designation criminalizes material support to the group under U.S. law and will sharpen cargo and traveler vetting tied to Ecuadorian nodes in the broader Andean smuggling network; continued fragmentation of Ecuador's gang landscape bears watching for new trafficking corridors and alliances that could substitute for degraded groups.
Corroborated · Sources: U.S. Department of State · Al Jazeera (July 1–2, 2026)
No. 3 · Friday, 3 July 2026
Greek police seize untraceable "ghost gun" shipment, arrest two Turkish nationals at Evros border
What? Northern Greece's organized-crime unit intercepted a shipment of 50 serial-number-free semi-automatic pistols and 49 magazines, vacuum-sealed in luggage, in a Wednesday-evening sting on freight corridors through the Evros border region. Two Turkish nationals were arrested; authorities say the weapons were destined for Turkish organized-crime networks operating in Greece — the third such ghost-gun interception in the area since October 2025.
Corroborated · Sources: GreekReporter · To Vima (July 3, 2026)
No. 2 · Thursday, 2 July 2026
Cartel faction reported moving bomb-laden drones across the Texas border
What? Border Patrol agents near Presidio, Texas were warned of a Sinaloa Cartel faction using drones to ferry explosives across the border for use against rival cartels inside Mexico, an escalation from the reconnaissance-only drone use previously documented in the area. The warning followed the arrest of two Mexican nationals carrying rifles who described themselves as cartel scouts. Single-source reporting.
So what? Explosive-capable drone traffic near the border raises the risk profile for anyone operating close to the line and could shift detection resources toward aerial smuggling methods alongside traditional ground and tunnel routes.
Single-source · Source: Latin Times (July 1, 2026)
No. 2 · Thursday, 2 July 2026
~$19M in cocaine seized at Monrovia's Roberts International Airport
What? Liberian National Police interdicted the shipment at the country's main international gateway.
Single-source · Source: OCCRP (Liberian National Police) (Jul 1, 2026)
No. 2 · Thursday, 2 July 2026
Thailand orders airport drug crackdown after Australia-linked smuggling cases
What? Thai Prime Minister Anutin ordered an urgent crackdown on drug trafficking through Thai airports after a string of cases linked smugglers to Australia-bound routes, including heroin concealed in impregnated cotton seat covers staged for export from Phrae province.
So what? Renewed enforcement pressure at a major Southeast Asian transit hub can shift concealment methods and departure points, a signal that overseas advisory-program screening on long-haul routes historically feeding onward smuggling toward North America will want to weigh.
Corroborated · Source: Bangkok Post (July 2, 2026)
No. 2 · Thursday, 2 July 2026
~$24M in cocaine concealed in a Chilean frozen-berry shipment seized at Port Botany, Sydney
What? Australian Border Force found the cocaine hidden in a frozen-berry consignment imported from Chile.
Single-source · Source: Australian Border Force (Jun 24, 2026; reported Jul 2)
No. 2 · Thursday, 2 July 2026
160 gold bars seized at Dhaka's Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport
What? Bangladesh Customs recovered the bars at the country's main international airport.
Single-source · Source: The Business Standard (Jul 2, 2026)
No. 1 · Wednesday, 1 July 2026
CJNG "shadow fleet" fuel-smuggling network exposed; Treasury sanctions two Mexicans, nine firms
What? On June 30 the U.S. Treasury sanctioned a fuel-smuggling network tied to the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) — described as the cartel's biggest income source after drugs. Fuel moves via tanker trucks, railcars, and "shadow fleets of maritime vessels," using front companies, false invoices, and misclassified customs documentation to evade Mexican import taxes.
So what? A cartel maritime-smuggling and trade-based-money-laundering scheme built on falsified customs paperwork and shadow-fleet vessels — a concern for manifest scrutiny, entity screening, and liaison with Mexican customs.
No. 1 · Wednesday, 1 July 2026
~361 kg of cocaine (HK$270M) seized in second Hong Kong yacht raid
What? Hong Kong authorities recovered the haul in a raid on a yacht in the Aberdeen Typhoon Shelter — believed to be part of one trafficking syndicate's batch — and arrested the vessel's registered owner.
Single-source · Source: South China Morning Post (Jul 1, 2026)
