Cape Verdean organized crime

Cape Verdean organized crime refers to the various criminal organizations that are active in Cape Verdean diaspora communities. The Cape Verdean Islands themselves are not main centres for criminal activities, but Cape Verde's increased importance as a transshipment point in the West African cocaine trade and the existence of sizeable Cape Verdean communities in New England, the Dutch port city of Rotterdam as well as in several cities in Portugal, France and Switzerland led to the formation of criminal gangs in the community active in the international drug trade supplemented with other criminal activities. Cape Verdean organized crime primarily comes in the form of street gangs, with varying levels of organization and sophistication.

Cape Verdean Organized Crime
Founding locationCape Verde
TerritoryFrance, Netherlands,
Portugal, Switzerland,
United States: New England
EthnicityCape Verdean
Criminal activitiesDrug trafficking, Weapon trafficking, Prostitution, Contract killing, Extortion, Racketeering, Money laundering.

Cape Verde as a drug transshipment point

West Africa has been affected by a range of illicit maritime activities, such as human trafficking, the smuggling of small arms and narcotics, illegal fishing and piracy. In an increasingly interconnected world the rise in these activities in the region does not solely represent a challenge to security and stability. In fact, it has profound implications for the international community, namely the EU and the US. Those activities, drug trafficking in particular, are a major source of income for drug cartels based in Latin America. Following the importance of Nigeria, and the creation of internationally active Nigerian organized crime, mainly Colombian criminal organizations began looking for further transshipment points attractive for drug trafficking activities. The next West African countries used as drug trafficking points were Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde, of which the latter had the bigger international diaspora community.[1]

While Guinea-Bissau as a transshipment point between South America, Africa and Europe in itself is just as important, the more widespread recognition of the activities of Cape Verdean criminals is in part due to the latter's larger overseas communities. American and European criminals of Cape Verdean origin deported back to their home country have in several instances become involved in drug smuggling activities on the island.[2][3] This in turn has made it able for them to become middlemen between the South American drug cartels and the Cape Verdean criminals within the overseas communities.

International activity

Several areas with a Cape Verdean community are home to local neighborhood-based street gangs or cliques. Some of those street gangs due to family or community ties have connections to drug smugglers based on the island of Cape Verde itself, making it able for them to import narcotics, especially cocaine into the respective countries they live in.

Belgium

Cape Verdean gangs are active in the southeast of Belgium, namely in the province of Luxembourg. A well known power base is the town of Athus where they conduct criminal activities such drug trafficking as well as prostitution.[4][5]

France

Cape Verdean communities exist in several Parisian suburbs. Some of them are home to their own local gangs.[6] Several of the gangs are active in the large-scale importation, as well as the wholesale and retail distribution of narcotics, as was the case with the infamous French-Cape Verdean crime boss named Arleto.[7]

Netherlands

In the Netherlands, Cape Verdeans have the biggest presence in the port city of Rotterdam. While the Dutch Cape Verdean community has a generally lesser street gang problem, some Cape Verdean criminals are active alongside established Dutch Antillean criminal organizations. Their criminal activities mostly concern large narcotics importations, local distribution, money laundering and murder.[8] Local gangs are also active in the extortion of alleged drug smugglers. A similar case led to the so-called Rotterdam cafe killings in 2005 when several people, including innocents, were killed by three local Cape Verdean career criminals. It was alleged that the motive was a dispute between the three killers and the owner of the bar over drugs and an unsanctioned murder back in Cape Verde.[9][10]

Portugal

Cape Verdean gangs are one of the most important sources of drugs in Portugal.[11] The notorious Lisbon neighborhood Cova da Moura, with a large Cape Verdean community, is a known stage for local rival criminal organizations battling over the drug trade and illegal rackets in the city.[12]

Switzerland

The small Swiss city of Martigny is home to two main criminal organizations, one Albanian mafia gang and another gang composed of persons of Cape Verdean descent, that have traditionally rivalled each other over the monopoly in trafficking of narcotics and other criminal activities in the country's Valais region. This has occasionally led to shootings and murders between the two parties.[13][14]

New England

The New England region in the United States, especially the cities of Boston and Brockton in Massachusetts and the Rhode Island state, is home to a sizeable Cape Verdean community. Several of the region's neighborhoods are home to street gangs. While larger and more structured gangs exist, a notable example is the gang named Cape Verdean Outlaws,[15] the vast majority of the Cape Verdean street gangs are based and named after their respective neighborhoods such as the Hendry Street Gang and the Woodward Avenue Gang.[16] These gangs sometimes cooperate, but also often rival with each other leading to murder and violent clashes over turf.[17][18][19]

The level of organization and sophistication is varying, with several gangs seldomly extending beyond local crimes and drug dealing, while some others are involved in large-scale drug trafficking enterprises,[20] as well as extortion, money laundering and strong-arm jobs for locally active American Mafia crews.[21]

A smaller Cape verdean community had emerged in central North Carolina in the mid 2000s where the youngest of the Faial family currently resides. This gang or family brokers many of the deals between gangs and potentially has the largest outreach from racketeering to strong arm jobs to significant political influence.

Notable Cape Verdean Gangs

Cape Verdean Gangs based in United States:

  • The Bowdoin Street Gang, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Boston.
  • The Cameron Street Gang, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Boston, they have a long-standing rivalry with the Wendover Street Gang.
  • The Cape Verdean Outlaws, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Boston, the gang also expanded to Brockton and other cities in Massachusetts.
  • The Draper Street Gang, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Boston.
  • The Geneva Avenue Gang, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Boston.
  • The Magnolia Street Gang, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Boston.
  • The Green Street Gang, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Brockton.
  • The Hendry Street Gang, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Boston.
  • The Perkins Avenue Gang, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Brockton.
  • The Spring Street Gang, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Brockton.
  • The Wendover Street Gang, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Boston, they have a long-standing rivalry with the Cameron Street Gang.
  • The Woodville Street Gang, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Boston.
  • The Woodward Avenue Gang, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Boston.
  • The Woodward Street Gang, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Boston, they are not to be confused with or a click of the Woodward Avenue Gang, which is another Cape Verdean gang.
  • The Johnson Court Thugs, a Cape Verdean street gang based in Brockton,

See also

References

  1. "Cape Verde And Drug Trafficking: A Major Challenge To Rule Of Law - Analysis". Eurasia Review. Archived from the original on 11 November 2014. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  2. "Dorchester Reporter, Dorchester MA USA". dotnews.com. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  3. http://uaces.org/documents/papers/1101/reslow.pdf
  4. "Archives - lesoir.be". lesoir.be. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  5. "Athus : découverte du corps d'un homme tué par balles". lavenir.net. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  6. Gérard Davet et Elise Vincent. "Les bandes sous la loupe des RG". Le Monde.fr. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  7. Le Point, magazine. "L'or blanc des Blacks des cités". lepoint.fr. Archived from the original on 26 December 2014. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  8. "Liquidaties voorkomen door arrestatie drugsbende". Elsevier. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  9. Buyways. "De Rotterdamse cafémoorden". Panorama. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  10. "Bloedig drama met veel vraagtekens". AD. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  11. Nations, United (2010). The Globalization of Crime. google.be. ISBN 9789211302950. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  12. "Alternativa Portugal". alternativaportugal.org. Archived from the original on 28 February 2015. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  13. letemps. "LeTemps.ch -". Archived from the original on 28 May 2010. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  14. letemps. "LeTemps.ch -". Archived from the original on 1 June 2010. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  15. "PoliceGrantsHelp". policegrantshelp.com. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  16. "Alleged members of violent Dorchester street gang arrested during early morning Boston police raids". Boston.com. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  17. "Dorchester gang member sentenced for '03 shootings that left 2 dead - The Boston Globe". boston.com. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  18. https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2013/12/18/man-who-has-played-role-cape-verdean-violence-city-sentenced-life-prison-for-murder/fmeckLA8eoZgFSrSxFAw1I/story.html
  19. http://www.bostonmagazine.com/2006/05/growing-up-in-gangland/
  20. "30 arrested in early morning gang raids across Dorchester". dotnews.com. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  21. "USDOJ: US Attorney's Office - District of Rhode Island". justice.gov. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.