The Americas | Blow up

Brazil’s biggest drug gang has gone global

The First Capital Command is now a mafia with links throughout Europe

A member of the First Capital Command shows off his 32 caliber revolver and drugs.
They go hand in handPhotograph: João Laet/ Guardian/ eyevine
|São Paulo

Football matches are tense affairs in Brazil. That is doubly true when they take place in prisons. In August 1993 a game in a São Paulo jail ended in horrific fashion. Eight inmates attacked their opponents, killing at least two. Covered in blood, they proclaimed the birth of a new gang: the First Capital Command (PCC). Thirty years later the PCC is Latin America’s biggest gang, with estimates suggesting it has 40,000 lifetime members and another 60,000 “contractors”. That would make it one of the world’s largest crime groups. And on November 6th a leaked report by Portugal’s security services claimed the group has 1,000 associates in Lisbon, the capital. The PCC is going global.

Explore more

This article appeared in the The Americas section of the print edition under the headline “Blow up”

From the November 25th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from The Americas

The illustration shows a serene woman blending with dots, symbolising introspection, transformation or fragmented identity. Replicating Alzheimer’s disease.

Canada has adopted assisted dying faster than anywhere on Earth

The province of Quebec now allows those with deteriorating illnesses to request an assisted death in advance

El Salvador's president, Nayib Bukele

Tether’s move to El Salvador is a win for President Nayib Bukele

Why the stablecoin firm has picked the Central American country for its headquarters


A cargo ship passes through a lock of the Panama Canal

From Greenland to Panama and Mexico, leaders are in shock

As Donald Trump eyes fine new pieces of real estate in the Americas and beyond


Canada and America have been fighting about timber for 40 years

As Donald Trump takes office, the chances of a lumber deal look slim

Justin Trudeau steps down, leaving a wrecked party and a divided Canada

Mark Carney and Chrystia Freeland are among those tipped as the next Liberal leader

Does made in Mexico mean made by China?

Donald Trump believes Mexico is a trojan horse for Chinese mercantilism