Cops unite in Central America: New deal allows cross-border pursuits
鈥 researches, analyzes, and investigates organized crime in the Americas. Find all of Hannah Stone's
The governments of Central America and the Dominican Republic are planning measures to share information on criminal records and allow 鈥渉ot pursuit鈥 chases across borders, in an effort to fight transnational criminal groups.
Designed to target organized crime groups, the agreement will allow law enforcement agencies from one country to pursue suspects over the border into a neighboring country. The agreement will also see states share criminal records so suspects are prosecuted as repeat offenders for crimes they have committed in other countries.
Representatives of the governments agreed on the wording of the deal at a conference in Panama last week,聽.聽Once the agreement is signed by justice ministers from each country, it will be taken to the mid-2013 Central American Integration System's (SICA) annual summit for signature by the presidents.
InSight Crime Analysis
Weak law enforcement cooperation between countries and lack of border controls has helped make Central America an attractive venue for organized crime with criminals able to move quickly into the next country in order to escape pursuit by the law. One example is offered by the case of Jose Natividad Luna Pereira, or 鈥淐hepe Luna,鈥 a Salvadoran drug trafficker who in recent years has been , where he also holds citizenship, after a series of failed police operations to capture him in .
Those that do get caught may get away with relatively light sentences despite a long criminal history if it is their first offense in the country where they are arrested.
Free movement policies, like the Central America-4 (CA-4) Border Control Agreement, have also made it easier for criminals to do business between El Salvador, , Honduras, and .
The Central American Parliament, which oversees SICA, has to further coordinate law enforcement efforts in the region, currently a major corridor for trafficking drugs from South America up to and the United States.
The , an Argentine folk singer murdered in Guatemala in 2011, has also drawn attention to the importance of cooperation in the region. Costa Rican Alejandro Jimenez, alias "El Palidejo," allegedly ordered the hit, which was intended to kill Nicaraguan nightclub owner Henry Fari帽as. Authorities in all three countries have been cooperating in the case, which has also led to arrests in .
鈥撀 is a writer for Insight 鈥 Organized Crime in the Americas, which provides research, analysis, and investigation of the criminal world throughout the region. Find all of her research