Illegal commerce rises 15 percent and ties to organized crime

A report from Universidad Andrés Bello shows police cases tied to illegal commerce grew 15 percent between 2020 and 2025, with sharp rises in regions such as Antofagasta and Valparaíso.

The study by the Observatorio del Crimen Organizado y Terrorismo indicates the rise is concentrated in strategic areas. Antofagasta recorded a 345 percent increase, Atacama 294 percent and Valparaíso 732 percent over the same period. The ten communes with the most cases in 2025 account for nearly 60 percent of the national total. The report notes a 78 percent correlation between illegal commerce and drug trafficking. Pablo Urquízar M, a law faculty academic, stated that these cases show how criminal structures challenge state authority. The document recommends a National Policy against Illicit Commerce integrated with strategies against organized crime.

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Police officers arresting five people in a rural Chilean community during an early morning operation.
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Police detain five people in operation in Temucuicui

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A police operation carried out in the early hours of Wednesday in the Temucuicui community, in the commune of Ercilla, resulted in five arrests, including members of a family clan investigated for vehicle thefts and attacks on Route 5 South.

Chile's Ministry of Foreign Affairs called a high-level meeting on May 28 in Santiago to coordinate actions against transnational organized crime.

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Colonel Héctor Jairo Betancourt, commander of Neiva's Metropolitan Police, called the rise in terrorist attacks in 2026 compared to 2025 'alarming', with four explosives detonated. He stressed that 'in terrorism, es mucho más lo que se ha prevenido' due to seizures. Homicides are up by five cases, but thefts have dropped markedly.

A national joint operation carried out on Friday, May 29, led to 1,415 arrests across Chile's 16 regions. Authorities also seized thousands of kilos of drugs and dozens of weapons.

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Chile's PDI seized over 37,000 pirated books on March 26 from three shops in Santiago's Galería Comercial San Diego, valued at an estimated $1.4 billion pesos. The raid followed a complaint from publishers affiliated with the Corporación del Libro y la Lectura. Two people were arrested for infringing intellectual property law.

A group of deputies from Renovación Nacional presented a bill to penalize the economic exploitation of adult sexual commerce in order to hit the financing of organized crime, particularly the Tren de Aragua.

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