Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Comando Vermelho Breaches PCC's São Paulo Heartland


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

- Rio de Janeiro's Comando Vermelho has established an operational cell in Rio Claro, São Paulo, directly on the PCC-controlled "Rota Caipira" - Brazil's main overland corridor for drugs and weapons from Bolivia and Paraguay

- Prosecutors last week seized R$33 million ($5.9 million) in assets and issued 19 arrest warrants targeting the CV network, which moves up to R$5 million ($890,000) monthly in drugs and weapons

- The PCC earns an estimated R$10 billion ($1.8 billion) annually and investigators say the CV incursion, while significant locally, does not threaten the PCC's statewide dominance

A Brazil drug trafficking rivalry that has simmered for nearly a decade between the country's two largest criminal organizations has found an unlikely new front: a 200,000-person city in the agricultural heartland of São Paulo state. Rio Claro, situated on the strategic "Rota Caipira" smuggling corridor that channels cocaine and weapons from Bolivia and Paraguay into Brazil's southeast, has become the stage for a territorial confrontation between the Rio de Janeiro-based Comando Vermelho (CV) and the São Paulo-based Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC). The Rio Times, a Latin American financial news outlet, examines how the escalating gang conflict threatens security along one of South America's most important drug transit routes.

How the Comando Vermelho Breached PCC Territory

The CV's foothold in São Paulo grew out of a local power struggle rather than a strategic invasion. Beginning around 2021, a group called the Bonde do Magrelo - led by Anderson Ricardo de Menezes, dubbed the "Marcola of the opposition" - began killing PCC-affiliated dealers in the Rio Claro area. The gang included PCC dissidents who had fallen out with the dominant faction. After Menezes was arrested in May 2023, his lieutenant Leonardo Felipe Calixto, known as "Léo Bode," took command and formally joined the Comando Vermelho, seeking protection from the Rio de Janeiro faction.

Researcher Armando Medina of the Federal University of São Carlos said the CV exploited an opportunity it did not create. The faction needed an entry point into São Paulo's "wall," and the Bonde do Magrelo's conflict with the PCC provided it. The CV supplied drugs, weapons, and operational know-how; in return, it gained a presence on the Rota Caipira - a corridor the PCC has controlled since the 2016 assassination of border kingpin Jorge Rafaat ended a two-decade truce between the factions.

Operation Linea Rubra Targets the Network

Last week, São Paulo's organized crime unit (Gaeco) launched Operation Linea Rubra, targeting the CV's logistical, financial, and operational infrastructure in the Rio Claro region. Courts authorized the seizure of up to R$33 million ($5.9 million) in bank accounts, 12 properties, and 103 vehicles linked to the network, plus the blocking of 35 individual and corporate tax IDs. Nineteen arrest warrants were issued. Calixto, identified as the cell's leader responsible for coordinating large-scale drug distribution and authorizing executions, remains a fugitive reportedly sheltering in CV-controlled communities in central Rio de Janeiro.

The investigation documented the CV cell moving more than R$1.19 million ($212,000) in under a month, with police estimating monthly revenue reaching R$5 million ($890,000) during peak periods. A 2025 raid in nearby Hortolândia uncovered nearly 100 kilograms of cocaine, marijuana, and hashish at a rural logistics depot, along with firearms, ammunition, and U.S. dollar cash. Some drug packages bore the CV's initials - an unusual detail this far into PCC-dominated territory.

Brazil Drug Trafficking Rivalry in Perspective

Police and prosecutors caution against overstating the CV's advance. The PCC generates an estimated R$10 billion ($1.8 billion) annually, operates in at least 28 countries, and has pivoted from street-level dealing to international wholesale trafficking through major ports and airports. The CV cell's revenues, while locally significant, represent a fraction of that scale. Investigators told O Estado de S. Paulo that the PCC initially ignored the conflict as a local dealer dispute, but eventually sent a senior figure to the region to contain the violence after late-2024 killings escalated.

The broader pattern in the Brazil drug trafficking rivalry, however, is noteworthy. Documents compiled by Metrópoles show CV presence in at least 23 São Paulo cities over the past three years, concentrated along the northern coast, Vale do Paraíba, and eastern interior. Security analysts suggest the PCC's strategic shift toward international operations has left gaps in retail drug markets that the CV is filling. Whether this constitutes a serious challenge to PCC hegemony or merely occupies spaces the dominant faction has vacated remains an open question - one that will be answered by whether the violence stays contained or spreads along the Rota Caipira.

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The Rio Times

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