One gun, 34 dead: Inside Ecuador’s war on black-market weapons

The gun – a 9-milimeter pistol – blazed a violent trail even by the standards of one of Ecuador’s most dangerous neighborhoods, the Nueva Prosperina precinct of Guayaquil.
Shell casings from bullets fired by the weapon, recovered at the scenes of 27 separate violent incidents, were linked to 34 deaths, according to a police forensic unit. And a police forensic official told Reuters the authorities believe the pistol remains on the streets.

The havoc attributed to a single firearm exemplifies the challenges for President Daniel Noboa’s crackdown on an explosion of violent crime and homicides since 2020, fueled by a sharp increase in smuggled weapons during the same time, many of them from the United States. Ecuador recorded 7,994 murders last year, a nearly six-fold increase since 2020.
Reuters was the first media organization granted access to police bullet-tracing efforts, a key component in Ecuador’s fight against crime. Tracing the origins of bullets and guns could help authorities choke off trafficking routes as well as build forensic histories of illegal weapons for future prosecutions, police said.
But it is slow work.
Of the more than 40,000 guns seized since 2019, just 900 have been traced, Major Efrain Arguello, who heads a national forensic investigations unit, told Reuters.
The weapon used in Nueva Prosperina may belong to, or have been rented out, among five rival drug gangs fighting for control of the precinct, Arguello said.
Police are investigating killings, robberies and other violent incidents in connection with the same gun.
“A gun connected to 30 crimes means there isn’t just an increase in trafficking, but in the circulation or internal sales of illicit guns,” said Renato Rivera, the director of the Ecuadorean Organized Crime Observatory research group.
The Pacific port city of Guayaquil is a hub for drug trafficking and the scene of turf wars between Mexican, Albanian and other foreign cartels that have led to a sharp rise in homicides.
Noboa in January designated 22 gangs – including the five operating in Nueva Prosperina – as terrorist organizations.
Since taking office last November, after he was elected to finish out his predecessor’s term, Noboa has increased funding for security forces by 6.6% to $3.52 billion.

EQUIPMENT SHORTAGES

But two senior police officials told Reuters that Ecuador is struggling to choke off gun trafficking routes from the United States, Peru and other countries in the region because of a lack of funding, forensic equipment and trained personnel.
Ecuador has just eight microscopes in a country of 17 million for bullet tracing, police said, and 247 trained technicians.
“We are tracing with what we have,” Arguello said.
In a small room in Quito’s police forensic building, technician Jhony Tapia peered through the only ballistic microscope in the city at shell casings and bullets from five guns used to kill four people at a bar in the Amazon.
Distinctive markings from the firing pins of individual firearms, visible under a high power microscope, allow technicians to match bullets to guns or to other bullets fired from the same weapon.
“The firing pin leaves a mark that is more effective (for tracing) than a fingerprint,” said Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin Molina, head of the national police arms and explosives trafficking unit.
Tapia will spend the next several hours studying 126 shell casings of varying sizes, he told Reuters.
His findings will be checked against a national police database of bullets and shell casings.
Finding a match is simpler if police also recover the gun, allowing technicians like Tapia to compare markings on the barrel, called rifling, with the marks left on bullets.
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