Chilean investigators close in on Venezuelan gang targeted by Trump

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By Isabel Debre and Nayara Batschke

Arica, Chile (AP) – The members of the Venezuelan gang even wrote their most tiny purchases in blue pen: $ 15 to Uber a drug trafficker; $ 9 for instant coffee during a quarter of speeds; $ 34 for supplies to clean what the investigators learned were torture rooms.

The meticulous calculation sheets seized during the police raids in the city of northern Arica of Arica and shared with the Associated Press, suggest the accounting structure of a multinational.

They represent the most complete documentation to date of the interior functioning of Tren de Aragua, the notorious criminal organization of Latin America designated by President Donald Trump as a foreign terrorist group.

An investigation built over the years by Chilean prosecutors in Arica, which has led to heavy sentences for 34 people in March – and inspired other cases which, earlier this month, sent a dozen managers from Tren of Aragua to prison for a total of 300 years – contrast with Trump’s mass deportations by Trump of alleged gangs.

While Trump supporters applaud the expulsions, investigators see the missed opportunities to collect evidence aimed at uprooting the criminal network which has grown in the region as a migration in Venezuela overvoltages and global cocaine demand differences.

“With the United States, the guys tore off the streets, they remove the tip of the iceberg,” said Daniel Brunner, president of the Brunner Sierra Group security company and former FBI agent. “They don’t look at how the group works.”

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Ceal members of the Gang Tren in Aragua attend a preliminary hearing in the face of accusations of homicide, in Santiago, Chile, July 9, 2025. (AP Photo / Esteban Felix)

Develop

Transnational mafias have fueled an extraordinary wave of crime in formerly peaceful countries such as Chile and consolidated power in countries like Honduras and Peru, infiltrating states bureaucracies, paralyzing the capacities of law enforcement and endangering regional stability.

New developments are testing democracies in Latin America.

“It is not your typical corruption involving species in envelopes,” said former Peruvian Minister of the Interior Ruben Vargas of impunity in his country. “These are criminal operators who exercise power in the political system.”

Chile, long considered one of the safest and richest nations in Latin America, is also among its less corrupt, according to Watchdog Transparency International, giving the authorities an advantage in the conduct of this type of organized crime.

But without any experience, the country has not been prepared as abductions, dismemberments and other macabre crimes reshaped from society.

Now, three years later, experts tend Arica as a case study in wider efforts to fight against the gang.

While some consider the president of Salvador Nayib Bukele on criminal gangs as a model, criticisms see an authoritarian police state which ran to a regular procedure.

“Criminal proceedings, financial information, witness protection and cooperation with other countries, is what it takes to disrupt criminal networks,” said Pablo Zeballos, Chilean Security Consultant and former intelligence officer.

Using Tren of Aragua documents recovered for the first time in 2022, Chilean prosecutor Bruno Hernández and his unit brought an unprecedented number of gang members last year, dismantling the northern gang ramification, known as Los Gallegos.

“He marked a milestone,” said prosecutor Mario Carrera last month at the Cerro Chuño d’Arica, a bastion of Los Gallegos. “Until then, they acted with impunity.”

Follow migrants to “virgin territory”

Tren de Aragua slipped into northern Chile in 2021, after the pandemic closed its borders and encouraged the Venezuelans to turn to the smugglers as they run away the crises of their nations and head to Peru, Colombia and Chile.

Héctor Guerrero Flores – A leader of Tren of Aragua nicknamed “Niño Guerrero” – sent managers to take up networks of “coyotes” if the human cargo through the borders of the desert of Chile.

“It was a virgin territory from their point of view,” said Ronna Rísquez, the author of a book on the group.

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