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Sao Paulo with federal support promises to crack organized crime and drug lords

Tuesday, November 6th 2012 - 22:38 UTC
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Federal Justice Minister Jose Eduardo Cardozo will have the job of creating a new police agency Federal Justice Minister Jose Eduardo Cardozo will have the job of creating a new police agency

Brazil announced on Tuesday it will create a new police agency, boost surveillance operations and mull transferring inmates to more secure prisons as it battles killings of police in surging violence blamed on a jail-based drug gang.

At least 33 people have been killed over the past five days in Sao Paulo, many of them state military police. The gang linked to the violence is known as the First Command of the Capital, or “PCC.”

The violence is concentrated in the city of Sao Paulo, the country’s financial and industrial hub, where drug lords control the many favelas (slums) that surround Brazil’s main cities.

A new agency bringing together state and federal police resources will be set up to spearhead the fight against organized crime and get to work Monday, Sao Paulo state governor Geraldo Alckmin said.

Other measures include the possible transfer of criminals responsible for the murders of military police and prison guards to federal penitentiaries, the governor said.

Also planned are heightened police surveillance of highways, airports and sea ports and stepped-up action against crack trafficking, including through video-monitoring.

Federal Justice Minister Jose Eduardo Cardozo, who met with the governor, said federal and state intelligence agencies would step up efforts to combat money laundering by criminal groups.

”The financial asphyxiation (of these groups) is fundamental,“ he said.

Press reports said Cardozo offered to make 300 cells available in state-of-the-art, well-protected federal jails to transfer dangerous criminals in Sao Paulo state jails.

The PCC has been linked to some of the 90 murders of state military officers and three prison guards across the state this year.

The PCC was formed in 1993 by eight prisoners serving time at a state maximum security prison in Taubate, 140 kilometres northeast of Sao Paulo.

Documents seized in a police sweep last week included a list with names, addresses and physical descriptions of more than 40 military police officers. Also found was a letter with orders to kill two police officers for every ”cowardly execution“ of a PCC member.

Sao Paulo state public security secretary Antonio Ferreira Pinto has dismissed reports that the PCC has 1.343 members spread out in 123 of Sao Paulo state's 645 cities.

”The faction is much smaller,“ he told the daily Folha de Sao Paulo last month. ”There aren't even 30 or 40 individuals who are imprisoned for a long time and engage in trafficking. We have choked off this traffic with big arrests.”

Overnight, seven people were killed and three minibuses were set ablaze in Sao Paulo, according to the state public security secretariat.
 

Categories: Politics, Brazil.

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  • ChrisR

    Sao Paulo state public security secretary Antonio Ferreira Pinto has dismissed reports that the PCC has 1.343 members spread out in 123 of Sao Paulo state's 645 cities.
    ”The faction is much smaller,“ he told the daily Folha de Sao Paulo last month. ”There aren't even 30 or 40 individuals who are imprisoned for a long time and engage in trafficking. We have choked off this traffic with big arrests.”

    Which of these statements is true, if any. It is critical for those who are to tackle this serious problem to know what they are up against.

    Shoot all of them, including their families but spare children under three, would be the only solution that would work.

    But for how long, and how do prisoners engage in large trafficking?

    Seems the whole of the state has corruption problems on a big scale.

    Nov 07th, 2012 - 05:07 pm 0
  • British_Kirchnerist

    Good to see Brazil starting to hopefully get on top of thi problem

    Nov 09th, 2012 - 11:39 am 0
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