No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeCentral AmericaGuatemalaGuatemala Seeks FBI Help After Gang Leaders Escape Prison

Guatemala Seeks FBI Help After Gang Leaders Escape Prison

The Guatemalan government announced Friday that it will ask the United States for an FBI team of experts to help recapture the leaders of the Barrio 18 gang who escaped from a prison. Last week, the government revealed the escape of 20 members of Barrio 18—designated a “terrorist” organization by both countries—from Fraijanes II prison near the capital.

“One of my first actions as minister will be to request today the collaboration of the United States government to deploy an FBI team specialized in gangs and fugitives, to assist us in the search for the 16 escaped gang members,” said the new security chief, Marco Antonio Villeda.

“We need all possible help. The FBI has the capability and the willingness to come and work with us to capture these people as soon as possible and get them off the streets,” Villeda insisted at a press conference alongside President Bernardo Arévalo.

The United States called the escape “unacceptable,” prompting Arévalo to remove the security leadership. Villeda, a career judge, took office as Minister of the Interior on Friday after the dismissal of his predecessor, Francisco Jiménez.

On Tuesday, Guatemala’s Congress declared gangs to be “terrorist” organizations and increased prison sentences for their members. So far, only four of the 20 inmates have been recaptured, and it is still unknown when and how they escaped.

We need to capture them

Villeda said that before taking office he met “with authorities from different U.S. agencies” to address the crisis and that he will also reach out to international organizations. The United States designated the Barrio 18 gang a “terrorist” organization in September, months after doing the same with its rival, Mara Salvatrucha.

Both gangs are responsible for the violence in the country and extort shopkeepers and passenger transport businesses. Villeda highlighted that he spent more than 30 years as a judge “enforcing the law and confronting the reality of the criminal world.”

Guatemala’s security forces have the capacity to recapture the fugitives, but the process would be slow and the public is demanding short-term results, he said. “We need to capture these people as soon as possible and, in that sense, the more help we have, the better,” he emphasized.

It will solve nothing

President Arévalo acknowledged the new minister’s judicial track record, a role in which he had to “face gangs, organized crime, and the fight against corruption.” However, many Guatemalans view the government’s promises of an effective crackdown on gangs with skepticism.

“Unfortunately, the new minister won’t solve anything. Everything is corrupt, and laws are useless if they aren’t enforced, nor are new prisons if inmates can escape without problems,” university student Francisco Orantes said.

New prison

To quiet criticism, Villeda said the “first priority is to take control of and overhaul our penitentiary system,” and he noted he will assess changes in the police leadership.

He also said the ministry will work “with intelligence to completely isolate maximum-security inmates, block their outside contacts, and thus reduce the influence of organized crime and lower offenses,” especially extortion.

The minister added that he will seek to speed up construction of a new maximum-security prison to house gang members.

Trending Now

New Seismic Station on Isla del Coco Improves Costa Rica Earthquake Monitoring

Costa Rica has added Isla del Coco to its national seismic monitoring network for the first time, giving scientists a new permanent observation point...

Ex-Air Canada Pilot Charged After Allegedly Flying Without Proper License

A former Air Canada captain has been charged in Canada after police alleged he flew more than 900 domestic and international flights without holding...

Five Leading Contenders to Win the 2026 World Cup

The 2026 FIFA World Cup has opened across North America, bringing the biggest field in tournament history and one of the deepest title races...

Mexico vs South Africa Headlines World Cup 2026 Opening Day

After four years of waiting, the 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off today, with the biggest and most expanded edition of the tournament in...

Costa Rica’s Forgotten WWII Role Echoes on D-Day’s 82nd Anniversary

Eighty-two years ago today, roughly 160,000 Allied troops landed in Normandy, France, launching Operation Overlord to liberate German-occupied Western Europe — the single day...

Canada Begins Historic 2026 World Cup Campaign Against Bosnia

For the thousands of Canadians living in Costa Rica or passing through on vacation, tomorrow is a day circled on every calendar. At 2:00...

Zverev Wins First Grand Slam Title at French Open 2026

Alexander Zverev won the first Grand Slam title of his career on Sunday, outlasting Italy's Flavio Cobolli 6-1, 4-6, 6-4, 6-7(5), 6-1 in the...

Sargassum Arrivals Break Records in Costa Rica’s Caribbean

The Center for Marine Science and Limnology Research (Cimar-UCR) reported that sargassum is breaking arrival records in Costa Rica’s Caribbean region. Cimar researchers Cindy...

Costa Rica Says Ocean Conservation Must Benefit Fishing Communities

Costa Rica used a major international environmental finance meeting in Uzbekistan to present a marine conservation message built around coastal communities, fishing families and...
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel