www.washingtonpost.com Open in urlscan Pro
104.96.133.89  Public Scan

URL: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/interactive/2024/ecuador-gang-takeover-noboa-cocaine/?utm_campaign=wp_post_most&utm_medium...
Submission: On April 12 via api from BE — Scanned from AT

Form analysis 1 forms found in the DOM

<form class="w-100 left" id="registration-form" data-qa="regwall-registration-form-container">
  <div>
    <div class="wpds-c-giPdwp wpds-c-giPdwp-iPJLV-css">
      <div class="wpds-c-iQOSPq"><span role="label" id="radix-0" class="wpds-c-hdyOns wpds-c-iJWmNK">Enter email address</span><input id="registration-email-id" type="text" aria-invalid="false" name="registration-email"
          data-qa="regwall-registration-form-email-input" data-private="true" class="wpds-c-djFMBQ wpds-c-djFMBQ-iPJLV-css" value="" aria-labelledby="radix-0"></div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="dn">
    <div class="db mt-xs mb-xs "><span role="label" id="radix-1" class="wpds-c-hdyOns"><span class="db font-xxxs gray-darker pt-xxs pb-xxs gray-dark" style="padding-top: 1px;"><span>By selecting "Start reading," you agree to The Washington Post's
            <a target="_blank" style="color:inherit;" class="underline" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/information/2022/01/01/terms-of-service/">Terms of Service</a> and
            <a target="_blank" style="color:inherit;" class="underline" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/privacy-policy/">Privacy Policy</a>.</span></span></span>
      <div class="db gray-dark relative flex pt-xxs pb-xxs items-start gray-darker"><span role="label" id="radix-2" class="wpds-c-hdyOns wpds-c-jDXwHV"><button type="button" role="checkbox" aria-checked="false" data-state="unchecked" value="on"
            id="mcCheckbox" data-testid="mcCheckbox" class="wpds-c-bdrwYf wpds-c-bdrwYf-bnVAXI-size-125 wpds-c-bdrwYf-kFjMjo-cv wpds-c-bdrwYf-ikKWKCv-css" aria-labelledby="radix-2"></button><input type="checkbox" aria-hidden="true" tabindex="-1"
            value="on" style="transform: translateX(-100%); position: absolute; pointer-events: none; opacity: 0; margin: 0px; width: 0px; height: 0px;"><span class="wpds-c-bFeFXz"><span class="relative db gray-darker" style="padding-top: 2px;"><span
                class="relative db font-xxxs" style="padding-top: 1px;"><span>The Washington Post may use my email address to provide me occasional special offers via email and through other platforms. I can opt out at any
                  time.</span></span></span></span></span></div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div id="subs-turnstile-hook" data-test-id="regform" class="wpds-c-eerOeF center"></div><button data-qa="regwall-registration-form-cta-button" type="submit"
    class="wpds-c-kSOqLF wpds-c-kSOqLF-hDKJFr-variant-cta wpds-c-kSOqLF-eHdizY-density-default wpds-c-kSOqLF-ejCoEP-icon-left wpds-c-kSOqLF-ikFyhzm-css w-100 mt-sm"><span>Start reading</span></button>
</form>

Text Content

5.15.3
Accessibility statementSkip to main content

Democracy Dies in Darkness
SubscribeSign in
The Takeover


A NARCO REVOLT TAKES A ONCE-PEACEFUL NATION TO THE BRINK

Warning: This graphic requires JavaScript. Please enable JavaScript for the best
experience.

Editor’s note: Some of the photos, videos and personal accounts below could be
upsetting.

Leer en español


HOW ECUADOR’S POWERFUL GANGS SEIZED A TV STATION, PUSHED THE COUNTRY INTO CHAOS
AND LED A YOUNG PRESIDENT TO DECLARE WAR

By Samantha Schmidt and 
Arturo Torres
April 12, 2024 at 5:00 a.m.

Share
Comment on this storyComment
Add to your saved stories
Save

GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador — The investigation was called “Metastasis,” a sweeping probe
into links between parts of Ecuador’s political and legal establishment and the
country’s ruthless drug gangs. On Dec. 14, Ecuador’s attorney general announced
the arrests of 30 people, including senior judges, prosecutors, police
officials, prison officers and prominent defense lawyers. All of them, she said,
were part of an organized criminal scheme to benefit one of the country’s top
drug traffickers.

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement


“Fellow citizens, the Metastasis case is a clear X-ray of how drug trafficking
has taken over the institutions of the state,” Diana Salazar Méndez, the
country’s top law enforcement official, said in a video address from her
fortress headquarters.

She warned that it was only a matter of time before the gangs struck back.

That response came on Jan. 9, and Ecuador, a country of 18 million people,
seemed for several hours to be on the verge of collapse.


(Steven Donovan via Storyful)

(AP)

(@yoonahZM via Storyful)

(Ministerio del Interior Ecuador via Storyful)



Riots broke out in prisons where the gangs had long held sway. Car bombs were
detonated in several cities. At least nine people were shot and killed on the
streets of Guayaquil, Ecuador’s largest city and a key hub in the cocaine trade,
while two police officers on a motorcycle were shot dead by an alleged gang
member in a nearby town. Seven other police officers were kidnapped. There were
numerous bomb threats, including one that forced Salazar and her staff to
evacuate their offices in the capital, Quito.

A group of armed men stormed the studio of one of Ecuador’s most widely watched
afternoon news programs and held more than a dozen members of the channel’s
staff hostage as the cameras rolled. Shots rang out inside TC Televisión in
Guayaquil and one of the gunmen shouted, “Don’t mess with the mafia.”

In response to the violence, President Daniel Noboa signed a declaration of
“internal armed conflict,” a decree that named 22 criminal gangs as terrorist
organizations and allowed the authorities to mobilize the military against them,
including by deploying soldiers to reestablish control in prisons.

The country’s penitentiaries had become offices for the gangs to run their
illicit businesses and arenas for them to wage war over turf. In 2021 and 2022,
hundreds of people had died in gang-on-gang prison massacres. Now the gangs were
challenging the state itself.

“This isn’t just gangs fighting for four blocks,” Noboa said in an interview in
late February. “This is a fight for ports, for borders, for entire towns. … The
dispute is over our way of life.”

This reconstruction of the day Ecuador nearly imploded contains previously
unreported details of the Jan. 9 attacks and the government response to an
insurrection that was the inevitable consequence of the unchecked rise of drug
gangs; there are an estimated 40,000 drug gang members in Ecuador, the president
said, equal to the number of soldiers in the country’s army. The Washington
Post’s reporting is based on interviews with 15 current Ecuadorian officials —
including the president, the attorney general, seven intelligence officials, and
top generals in the armed forces and police — as well as a current gang leader
and two former gang inmates, the U.S. ambassador to Ecuador and several of the
journalists held hostage in the armed takeover of the TV station.

Press Enter to skip to end of carousel


BEHIND THE GROWING POWER OF THE CARTELS


A boom in cocaine production and the expanding power of criminal organizations
is a growing threat in Latin America, the United States’ biggest trading
partner. In a multi-part series, The Washington Post is examining how
organized-crime groups have vastly expanded their influence, corroding the
region’s democracies, strangling commerce and propelling thousands of people to
the U.S. southern border.
Latin America is producing more than twice as much cocaine as it did a decade
ago. Nearly every one of its mainland nations has become a major producer or
mover of the drug, feeding booming markets in the United States, Europe and
South America.
Organized-crime groups have moved well beyond narcotics. They’ve created
sprawling illicit industries in extortion, migrant smuggling and gold mining.
Their power has become so great that they form a new kind of insurgency,
infiltrating government operations.

1/3

End of carousel

Ecuador was long known as an “island of peace,” an affordable and tranquil
retirement destination for Americans. But after the end of Latin America’s
commodities boom, and a 2016 earthquake in Ecuador, poverty and inequality rose.
The government eliminated several institutions to cut costs, including the
Justice Ministry. As the authorities’ control slipped, prison authorities began
housing inmates according to gang membership.

A soldier keeps watch during a security operation in an impoverished
neighborhood of Guayaquil on Jan. 12. (Yuri Cortez/AFP/Getty Images)
A view of Guayaquil from the city's Santa Ana Hill. Guayaquil is Ecuador's
largest city and a key hub in the cocaine trade. (Johanna Alarcón for The
Washington Post)

The country’s small local gangs have become multimillion-dollar criminal
enterprises fueled by the rising global demand for cocaine. The coronavirus
pandemic gave them a vast pool of unemployed young men desperate for cash. And
Ecuador’s dollarized economy and location — squeezed between the world’s two
largest cocaine producers, Colombia and Peru — created an ideal transit point
for international drug cartels moving cocaine to the United States or to Europe.
After President Rafael Correa kicked the Americans out of a U.S. naval base in
Manta in 2009, Ecuador’s coastline of ports was left with minimal protection.

Using the country’s prisons as command centers, Ecuadorian gangs have formed
alliances with Mexican cartels and the Albanian mafia and infiltrated nearly
every level of government in Ecuador. They have imported some of the gruesome
violence associated with Mexico’s cartels, including decapitating victims and
hanging them by their feet in public places. Children as young as 13 have been
deployed as assassins.

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement


As Ecuador finally fights back, it’s unclear if the country’s institutions can
prevail.

The Jan. 9 attacks involved a rare alliance between rival gangs whose leaders
felt threatened by Salazar’s Metastasis investigation and a vow by Noboa to
isolate them within new maximum-security facilities, according to Ecuadorian
investigators.

Timeline of gang violence in Ecuador

Evolution of organized

crime in Ecuador

Local networks

Urban gangs

(Ñetas, Latin Kings)

and families

(Telmo Castro,

Reyes Torres)

1990

Poorly

organized

2000

Consolidation

2010

Monopoly

Choneros

2020

Organized local crime

The 2020 killing of the Los Choneros leader Jorge Luis Zambrano, also known as
“JL," caused the powerful group to fracture into rival gangs.

It set off a wave of violence in the prisons and in the streets.

2021

Atomization

2023

Reorganization

Independents

Allies

Choneros

Tiguerones

Mafia duende

Aguilas

Lagartos

Latin Kings

R7

Tiburones

Fatales

Lobos

Gansters

Chone Killers

Jalisco

Nueva

Generación

Albanian

mafia

Sinaloa

cartel

Internationalization

Evolution of organized

crime in Ecuador

Local networks

Urban gangs

(Ñetas, Latin Kings)

and families

(Telmo Castro,

Reyes Torres)

1990

Poorly

organized

2000

Consolidation

2010

Monopoly

Choneros

2020

Organized local crime

Killing of ‘JL’ on Dec. 20, 2020

The 2020 killing of the Los Choneros leader Jorge Luis Zambrano, also known as
“JL," caused the powerful group to fracture into rival gangs. It set off a wave
of violence in the prisons and in the streets.

2021

Atomization

2023

Reorganization

Independents

Allies

Choneros

Tiguerones

Mafia duende

Aguilas

Lagartos

Latin Kings

R7

Tiburones

Fatales

Lobos

Gansters

Chone Killers

Jalisco

Nueva

Generación

Albanian

mafia

Sinaloa

cartel

Internationalization

Evolution of organized crime in Ecuador

Poorly organized

1990

Local networks

Urban gangs (Ñetas, Latin Kings) and

families (Telmo Castro, Reyes Torres)

Consolidation

2000

Monopoly

2010

Choneros

Organized local crime

2020

The 2020 killing of the Los Choneros leader Jorge Luis Zambrano, also known as
“JL," caused the powerful group to fracture into rival gangs.

It set off a wave of violence in the prisons and in the streets.

Killing of ‘JL’ on Dec. 20, 2020

Atomization

2021

Independents

Allies

Choneros

Reorganization

2023

Aguilas

Mafia duende

Tiguerones

R7

Latin Kings

Lagartos

Fatales

Tiburones

Gansters

Lobos

Chone Killers

Jalisco

Nueva

Generación

Albanian

mafia

Sinaloa

cartel

Internationalization

Evolution of organized crime in Ecuador

Poorly organized

1990

Local networks

Urban gangs (Ñetas, Latin Kings) and

families (Telmo Castro, Reyes Torres)

Consolidation

2000

Monopoly

2010

Choneros

Organized local crime

2020

The 2020 killing of the Los Choneros leader Jorge Luis Zambrano, also known as
“JL," caused the powerful group to fracture into rival gangs.

 

It set off a wave of violence in the prisons and in the streets.

Killing of ‘JL’ on Dec. 20, 2020

Atomization

2021

Independents

Allies

Choneros

Reorganization

2023

Tiguerones

Aguilas

Mafia duende

R7

Latin Kings

Fatales

Tiburones

Lagartos

Gansters

Lobos

Chone Killers

Jalisco

Nueva

Generación

Albanian

mafia

Sinaloa

cartel

Internationalization

The violence, the attorney general said, was directed by Los Lobos — The Wolves
— the same drug-trafficking organization accused of orchestrating last year’s
assassination of presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio, who had
campaigned on an anti-corruption, anti-gang platform. But Los Lobos drew on the
firepower of multiple criminal organizations to orchestrate the Jan. 9 attacks,
officials said. That alliance was the clearest warning yet that the gangs would
brook no challenges to their position — a sense of impunity that is being
replicated by criminal organizations in country after country across Latin
America.

The cocaine trade is booming like never before, and the vast riches it and other
crimes generate are corroding institutions and democracy in the region. Across
the globe, demand for cocaine has soared as America’s addiction has been
replicated in Europe and Latin America itself. As cocaine users increase at a
faster rate than the population — and as drug trafficking expands eastward,
according to the United Nations — markets in Asia and Africa have begun to
explode.

Anti-narcotics police guard packs of cocaine that were part of a three-ton
shipment found in a container of bananas at the port of Guayaquil in 2022.
(Marcos Pin/AFP/Getty Images)

South America now produces more than twice as much cocaine as it did a decade
ago. Colombia, still the source of most of the world’s cocaine, logged record
levels of coca production in 2022, and the amount of land used to grow that base
ingredient is more than five times what it was when Pablo Escobar — among the
first and most infamous of the Colombian drug lords — was killed in 1993.

The cartels have expanded their reach and extended their routes, penetrating
ports from Costa Rica to Argentina, and turning nearly every Latin American
mainland nation, including Ecuador, into major producers or movers of cocaine,
according to the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime. Across Ecuador and much of
Latin America, these criminal groups have also diversified their portfolios,
relying heavily on extortion, kidnappings, illegal gold mining and migrant
smuggling to grow their profits and gain territorial control.

A map of the route taken to illegal ship cocaine to the European market

2023 cocaine seizures

An analysis by InSight Crime of the top five cocaine seizures in Europe in 2023
by Insight Crime found that three of the routes from South America were by ship
from Ecuador.

Largest European

seizures

Seizures in

South America

Route from South

America shown

In metric tons

200

400

100

600

10

Hamburg, Ger.

Rotterdam, Neth.

9

From Ecuador

Antwerp, Belg.

8

Vigo, Spain

8

Algeciras, Spain

7

VENEZUELA

PANAMA

44

96

COLOMBIA

Transporting cocaine

through the interior of

South America requires

trucks, planes, river boats

and ultimately ships to

reach Europe.

739

ECUADOR

195

BRAZIL

72

PERU

BOLIVIA

21

33

PARAGUAY

Atlantic

Ocean

0.6

CHILE

Incomplete

data

URUGUAY

3

ARGENTINA

7

Pacific

Ocean

Routes shown are

schematic.

Note: Origin of shipment to Vigo not clear. It is believed to have come from
Ecuador via Colombia.

Source: InSight Crime analysis of seizures and routes

compiled from official sources and media reports.

2023 cocaine seizures

An analysis by InSight Crime of the top five cocaine seizures in Europe in 2023
by Insight Crime found that three of the routes from South America were

by ship from Ecuador.

Largest European

seizures

Seizures in

South America

In metric tons

Route from South

America shown

200

400

100

600

10

Hamburg, Ger.

9

Rotterdam, Neth.

From Ecuador

8

Antwerp, Bel.

8

Vigo, Spain*

Algeciras, Spain

7

PANAMA

Atlantic

Ocean

VENEZUELA

96

44

COLOMBIA

739

ECUADOR

Transporting cocaine through

the interior of South America

requires trucks, planes,

river boats and ultimately

ships to reach Europe.

195

BRAZIL

72

PERU

21

BOLIVIA

33

PARAGUAY

0.6

CHILE

Incomplete

data

URUGUAY

3

ARGENTINA

7

Pacific

Ocean

Routes shown are

schematic.

Note: Origin of shipment to Vigo not clear. It is believed to have come from
Ecuador via Colombia.

Source: InSight Crime analysis of seizures and routes compiled from

official sources and media reports.

2023 cocaine seizures

An analysis by InSight Crime of the top five cocaine seizures in Europe in 2023

found that three of the routes from South America were by ship from Ecuador.

Largest European cocaine seizures

By route from South America

Hamburg, Germany

10 metric tons

Algeciras, Spain

9.4

Hamburg

Shipped

from

Ecuador

Rotterdam

GER.

GER.

8

Rotterdam, Netherlands

Antwerp

Antwerp

Antwerp, Belgium

7.7

7.5

Vigo, Spain*

Vigo*

Cocaine seizures in South America

SPAIN

SPAIN

In metric tons

Algeciras

PANAMA

95.7

VENEZUELA

GUYANA

43.7

0.07

SURINAME

COLOMBIA

0.13

739.5

ECUADOR

BRAZIL

195.4

72.3

PERU

Transporting cocaine through

the interior of South America

requires trucks, planes,

river boats and ultimately

ships to reach Europe.

21.5

BOLIVIA

32.9

600 Metric tons

CHILE

Incomplete

data

PARAGUAY

400

0.61

Atlantic

Ocean

200

URUGUAY

3.25

100

ARGENTINA

7.3

Note: Origin of shipment to Vigo not clear. It is believed to have come from
Ecuador via Colombia.

Routes shown are schematic.

Pacific

Ocean

Source: InSight Crime analysis of seizures

and routes compiled from official sources

and media reports.

This transformation could be considered a “third wave” of transnational crime in
Latin America, according to security analyst Douglas Farah. In the first,
Escobar began directly confronting the state. In the second, Colombia’s Cali
cartel allied with Mexican cartels and homegrown guerrillas to bribe officials
and create more-sophisticated distribution networks. But today’s crime is no
longer a one-product, one-market enterprise focused on cocaine and the United
States. An influx of new actors — from as far away as the Balkans and Russia —
has turned Latin America into a sort of Silicon Valley for organized crime,
Farah said, one that rewards innovation and diversification.

As these criminal structures penetrate institutions in Ecuador and across the
region, the rise or fall of murder rates depends less on government actions and
more on alliances between criminal groups, said Renato Rivera, coordinator of
Ecuador’s Organized Crime Observatory, an initiative funded by the U.S. State
Department.

“Those who set the rules of the game in Latin America are not the governments,”
Rivera said, “but the criminal organizations.”

President Daniel Noboa in his office at the presidential palace in Quito. As
chaos unfolded on Jan. 9, Noboa declared a state of "internal armed conflict"
against the gangs. (Andres Yepez for The Washington Post)



‘LIVING IN GOTHAM’

On Nov. 23, 2023, Noboa, the U.S.-educated son of a banana tycoon, took the oath
of office as Ecuador’s president, vowing to restore public safety. That year,
Ecuador recorded the highest murder rate in Central and South America, at more
than 44 homicides for every 100,000 residents — a nearly 75 percent increase
from a year earlier. The violence in Guayaquil had begun to resemble the worst
years in Medellín, Colombia; parts of the city were off-limits to the police.

Noboa, 36, said he soon received a six-page letter from a leader of Los Lobos,
asking for a meeting to negotiate a peace deal. The gang leader pledged to bring
quiet to the country’s prisons and provide information to help dismantle rival
gangs in exchange for government promises to protect the lives of Los Lobos
figures and improve education access and work opportunities in the prisons.
Instead, in one of his first major televised interviews, Noboa told a journalist
he had a “nice plan” to regain control of the prisons. The massive Guayaquil
penitentiary, he said, would start to look less like Quito’s central shopping
mall, a place where inmates could obtain anything they wanted, from smartphones
to flat-screen TVs. Weapons, including guns, were routinely smuggled in.

A map depicting the seven prisons in Ecuador where the military liberated
hostages in January

Prisons where

the military

liberated

hostages

in January

COLOMBIA

Pacific

Ocean

Quito

ECUADOR

Guayaquil

PERU

100 MILES

Prisons where the

military liberated

hostages in January.

COLOMBIA

Pacific

Ocean

Quito

ECUADOR

Guayaquil

PERU

100 MILES

“Just don’t tell Fito,” Noboa joked, referring to one of the country’s most
prominent drug traffickers, José Adolfo “Fito” Macías Villamar. From behind
prison walls in Guayaquil, officials said, Fito led Los Choneros, a gang that at
one point claimed 5,000 members inside the prison system and 7,000 beyond,
dominating a large part of Ecuador’s cocaine trade in partnership with Mexico’s
Sinaloa cartel.

By the start of 2024, violent deaths soared as the gangs tried to destabilize
the government, officials said. Salazar warned that the gangs were planning
“something big” and that sophisticated weapons were being smuggled into prisons.
But military and police intelligence received no specific warnings about an
attack at a TV station, officials said. Salazar privately pleaded with
authorities to capture a gang leader from Los Lobos, Fabricio Colón Pico, who
had threatened to kill her. It wasn’t until she revealed the death threats in a
public hearing that security forces detained him.

Inmates shout from a prison rooftop in Guayaquil last August to demand the
return of the gang leader known as “Fito,” who had been moved to a
maximum-security prison. A judge later had him returned to the regional prison.
(Martin Mejia/AP)
Soldiers enter Guayaquil's Litoral Penitentiary on Feb. 9, weeks after the
military took control of the country's prisons. Thousands of people have been
arrested during Ecuador's "internal armed conflict," and many of them are at
Litoral. (John Moore/Getty Images)

Then on Jan. 7, the national police entered Ecuador’s most infamous prison, the
Guayaquil regional penitentiary, to check on Fito, following reports that he had
escaped. The drug lord was gone. He had simply walked out the front door days
earlier, intelligence officials later learned, after he was tipped off about
plans to relocate him.

It was the “worst day” of Noboa’s new presidency, said Esteban Torres, Noboa’s
deputy government minister.

On the morning of Jan. 9, Noboa woke up at 5 a.m., as he often did, to work out
in the gym a few doors down from his office in the presidential palace. While
running on the treadmill, he saw on his phone that Colón Pico, only recently
detained, had escaped from prison, crawling out of a hole he had carved in a
prison wall.

“It was like we were living in Gotham,” Noboa said. “All of the crazy people had
escaped.”

Noboa got off the treadmill and called the minister of government and acting
interior minister, Mónica Palencia.

“We’re doing it,” he said, setting his plan in motion.

The TC Televisión news studio where armed men stormed into a live broadcast and
held more than a dozen staff members hostage on Jan. 9. (Johanna Alarcón for The
Washington Post)



‘THEY WANT TO KILL US’

It was already a busy news day at TC Televisión as editor in chief Alina
Manrique made last-minute changes to the script for the afternoon broadcast.
Prison unrest. A bomb at a police station.

At 2:13 p.m., in a WhatsApp group chat for the TC Televisión newsroom, a
reporter shared a news release from the Education Ministry announcing that
classes would be canceled at schools near the country’s prisons. Manrique was
about to add the item to the lineup when another group message landed.

“They want to kill us all,” a reporter posted, after a colleague saw armed men
storming the building. “Urgent. They want to kill us in TC.”

Manrique heard gunshots and glass shattering, then screams. She ran into a
bathroom, and two colleagues followed her.

A TC Televisión anchor, who was present during the Jan. 9 attack, prepares to
record the midday news on Feb. 2. (Johanna Alarcón for The Washington Post)
Alina Manrique, TC Televisión's editor in chief, was held hostage by gang
members during the Jan. 9 attack. (Johanna Alarcón for The Washington Post)
Johanna Cevallos, a journalist and anchor for TC Televisión, hid under a small
desk with a colleague as gang members stormed her workplace. (Johanna Alarcón
for Washington Post)

Thirteen mostly masked young men — carrying a machine gun, several shotguns,
revolvers, grenades and at least three sets of explosives — had burst through
the channel’s front gate, taking the lone security guard as their first hostage.

As shots rang out, about 180 staff members searched for hiding places throughout
the three-story building, texting their contacts in the police department or the
presidential palace for help.

Manrique knelt on a toilet in a dark bathroom stall, huddled silently next to
her two colleagues. She turned the brightness down on her phone and stuck it in
her bra. She was shaking so much, she said, it felt like the toilet was coming
loose. As the gunmen entered the bathroom, shouting for people to come out,
Manrique and her colleagues walked out of the stall with their hands up.

The gunmen marched the three journalists to the studio. One ripped off
Manrique’s necklace, grabbed her by the hair and threw her to the ground. She
thought about her two children, and prayed they wouldn’t have to see their
mother die on live television.

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement


The gunmen, wearing baseball hats and athletic gear, milled around the studio,
shouting and waving their guns.

“The mafia has the power,” one of them proclaimed. “The president can’t do
anything to us.”

But these men — and boys — didn’t seem to have much idea of what to do next or a
plan for escape. As it became apparent from the sound of helicopters that police
were massing outside, the youngest of the gang members, ages 15 and 17, became
visibly agitated. One attacker put dynamite in a TV anchor’s pocket and forced
him to plead with police on television not to enter the building.

Eventually, the men grabbed Manrique and five others and moved them to another
studio. They started searching for an escape route, climbing up on the catwalk
hanging over another studio and trying to find an opening in the ceiling. They
called a gang leader on the outside: Could he send help?

When they realized they were no longer on the air, gang members forced the
hostages to live-stream on Instagram and tell the police to leave. With a gun to
her head, a 22-year-old production assistant, only on her second day at work,
offered to film using her phone.

Forced to live-stream at gunpoint
0:58

(Odalis García)

A group of tactical police officers in full riot gear was already inside the
building. Victor Herrera, the head of the police force for Guayaquil, was
mulling whether to give the order to breach.

“It was a situation that obligated us to make decisions in the moment, and to
make them fast,” he recalled.

A woman watches a police operation from her home in Mount Sinai, a town in the
Guayaquil area. (Johanna Alarcón for Washington Post)



‘THIS IS TERRORISM’

U.S. Ambassador Michael J. Fitzpatrick was stepping out of a meeting with the
foreign minister in Quito when he saw the news on his phone. A group of armed
men had taken over the studio of TC Televisión.

Here we go, he said to himself. Just weeks earlier, Fitzpatrick had warned in a
speech that the influence of the gangs was destroying the state. For many
Ecuadorians, the ambassador’s indictment was self-evident, though somewhat
unwelcome coming from a gringo.

The foreign minister called Fitzpatrick and told him the president would like to
speak with him.

“Turn the car around,” Fitzpatrick told his driver. “Let’s go to the
presidential palace.”

The ambassador was invited straight up to Noboa’s office. Fitzpatrick would stay
for hours, watching the president and his top ministers and aides as they tried
to get a grip on what was happening.

Soldiers and police patrol amid traffic on the streets of Guayaquil. (Johanna
Alarcón for The Washington Post)

The sense of confusion was compounded by the amount of misinformation
circulating on social media. Videos purported to show armed takeovers at metro
stops, universities, hospitals and other key facilities across the country.
Another video falsely showed the execution of inmates in a prison. In cities
across the country, including the capital, emergency call centers were fielding
hundreds of reports of suspicious objects; everyone thought there was a car bomb
on their street.

“No one knew what was coming next,” Fitzpatrick said, comparing the chaos to the
morning of Sept. 11, 2001, in the United States.

Fitzpatrick sat mostly silent as Noboa finalized the declaration of armed
conflict with his aides. But during a quiet moment, the ambassador and president
discussed the implications of such a decision. The two considered what it would
mean to classify the gangs as enemy combatants, under international humanitarian
laws of war.

“This is terrorism,” Noboa said. “They’ve taken this to the next level.”

Armed standoff at TC Televisión
0:21

Body-camera footage from the Ecuador National Police shows the final moments of
an armed standoff with gang members in a TV station on January 9. (Ecuador
National Police)


‘STAY STILL’

Herrera, the police commander in charge of the scene, had spent two decades
leading a specialized unit for hostage situations. He knew that protocol
required him to wait for a hostage negotiator to arrive. But as he watched the
gunmen on the live feed, he was afraid that their obvious lack of discipline
could lead one of them to kill a hostage. He decided not to wait.

The commander forced open the door to the studio and stepped inside, his rifle
pointed straight ahead.

“Put your hands on your neck!” he shouted to the gunmen from behind a riot
shield, according to body-camera footage provided to The Post. “Come to the
front. Don’t worry, nothing will happen to you. … I’m talking to you. Put your
weapon in the front where I can see it. Nothing will happen.”

Gen. Victor Herrera, commander of Guayaquil's police force, led the operation to
enter the TC Televisión studio. (Johanna Alarcón for The Washington Post)

The armed men, who had concluded they were out of options, slowly walked toward
him, holding on to several of the hostages.

“Put the weapon right there,” Herrera told one of them, who slid his rifle onto
the studio floor.

“Stay still. Stay right there,” the police commander said.

As Manrique watched the men hand over their weapons, she tried to get up off the
floor, but her body wouldn’t let her. All she could do was reach a hand toward a
police officer, who lifted her off the ground and took her out through an
emergency exit to the street.

“You’re okay,” the officer told her. “You’re alive.”

Police patrol during an operation to seize weapons, drugs and explosives in
Nueva Prosperina, one of the most dangerous sectors of Guayaquil. (Johanna
Alarcón for The Washington Post)



SINGING THE NATIONAL ANTHEM

By 3:15 p.m., the armed conflict declaration had been signed by Noboa and
uploaded to the official government website. Ecuador was in a state of war.

Gen. Alexander Levoyer, previously in charge of the armed forces in violent
Esmeraldas province, was tasked with leading the operation. In a matter of
hours, he moved troops, planes, tanks, armored vehicles and heavy weapons from
the borders to the country’s main cities.

“We needed to raise our voice, to say that we are soldiers, we have lethal
weapons and we have the capabilities for a conventional war,” Levoyer said in an
interview, “and it pains us to have to use that weapon against our fellow
citizens.”

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement


His first task was to regain control of the prisons — the gangs had taken 162
people hostage across seven penitentiaries. On Jan. 13, he started with a
facility in the city of Ambato, tucked beneath the Andes in Ecuador’s Central
Valley. The soldiers arrived on armored personnel carriers, and the inmates felt
the ground tremble as they approached.

“We are the armed forces,” the soldiers announced on loudspeakers. “Lay down
your weapons. Liberate your hostages.”

The gangs surrendered without a fight. Levoyer told his soldiers to raise the
Ecuadorian flag and sing the national anthem. One by one, in the days that
followed, the armed forces took control of 18 prisons.

Troops, and a newly empowered police force, have been pushing into neighborhoods
controlled by the gangs and raiding illicit drug facilities. In an operation in
early February, police raided homes in one of Guayaquil’s most dangerous
neighborhoods — they needed no warrant to do so under the declaration of armed
conflict — and found weapons, dynamite, cocaine and marijuana. As of late March,
security forces had detained 16,459 people. Police have seized more than 78 tons
of cocaine since the start of the year, including 22 tons in just one raid,
officials said.

Police return to their patrols after raiding two houses in the Ciudad de Diós
area of Guayaquil. Ecuador's state of internal armed conflict allowed police to
enter homes without warrants. (Johanna Alarcón for The Washington Post)
A police official in charge of a drug and weapons seizure speaks to the media
after the raid of a home in Nueva Prosperina. (Johanna Alarcón for The
Washington Post)

The cocaine trade has taken a hit. The logistics of moving the product have
become riskier, and more expensive. Before Jan. 9, it cost $100,000 to $150,000
to move one ton of cocaine in Guayaquil, according to one gang leader. Now it
costs $300,000 to $350,000.

“We’re using one of our last cards,” Levoyer said of the government action.
“Imagine if the armed forces fail, God forbid. Could Ecuador become a failed
state?”

Human rights activists warned, however, that Noboa’s declaration allowed the
government to arrest anyone it accused of “terrorism,” and opened the door to
profiling based on tattoos or other indicators of gang membership — an approach
similar to that of El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele, who has jailed more
than 1 percent of his country’s population in a nearly two-year war against
gangs.

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement


On Friday, an emboldened Noboa drew international outrage by ordering security
forces to storm the Mexican Embassy in Quito to arrest a former vice president,
Jorge Glas, who was seeking refuge there from multiple corruption convictions.
Mexico’s president called Noboa’s move a violation of international law and
responded by breaking off diplomatic relations with Ecuador.

But Noboa’s action was met with support at home, where his approval ratings are
among the highest for a president in South America.

On Sunday, Noboa issued a decree extending the state of internal armed conflict,
allowing the military to continue operations against the country’s gangs. The
president plans to hold a referendum on April 21 to decide whether to give the
military and security forces some kind of permanent control over prisons and
ports.

Officials have warned that the gangs could fight back with a vengeance.

“Once you lift your foot off the snake,” said one intelligence official, “it can
bite you.”

Diana Salazar Méndez, Ecuador's attorney general, with her security guards at
her office in Quito. She has faced repeated death threats as a result of her
probe of links between drug traffickers and the country's top institutions.
(Johanna Alarcón for The Washington Post)

Although top gang leaders, including Fito and Colón Pico, remain on the run, the
attorney general has become a prisoner in her own home. Salazar leaves the house
only to go to her office, which bristles with security. She can’t go to the
grocery store, a restaurant or any public place. She exercises, gets her hair
cut and meets her friends in her home. Her 9-year-old daughter, donning a
bulletproof vest, travels to school with a security detail and arrives at
different times every day.

Salazar doesn’t know if she’ll ever be able to live normally again. “The
criminals will never forgive me,” she said.



ABOUT THIS STORY

Design and development by Tyler Remmel. Graphics by Samuel Granados and Laris
Karklis.

Story editing by Peter Finn. Project editing by Reem Akkad. Design editing by
Joe Moore. Photo editing by Jennifer Samuel. Video editing by Jon Gerberg. Copy
editing by Martha Murdock.

Graphics sources: South American and European cocaine seizure data provided by
InSight Crime.

Video sources: TC Televisión, AP, Odalis García, Ecuador National Police, Armed
Forces of Ecuador, Ecuador Interior Ministry, Storyful, Steven Donovan,
@yoonahZM, @Paulcoellosegar.

Share
832 Comments
Samantha SchmidtSamantha Schmidt is The Washington Post's Bogotá bureau chief,
covering all of Spanish-speaking South America. @schmidtsam7


Subscribe to comment and get the full experience. Choose your plan →



Company
About The Post Newsroom Policies & Standards Diversity & Inclusion Careers Media
& Community Relations WP Creative Group Accessibility Statement Sitemap
Get The Post
Become a Subscriber Gift Subscriptions Mobile & Apps Newsletters & Alerts
Washington Post Live Reprints & Permissions Post Store Books & E-Books Print
Archives (Subscribers Only) Today’s Paper Public Notices Coupons
Contact Us
Contact the Newsroom Contact Customer Care Contact the Opinions Team Advertise
Licensing & Syndication Request a Correction Send a News Tip Report a
Vulnerability
Terms of Use
Digital Products Terms of Sale Print Products Terms of Sale Terms of Service
Privacy Policy Cookie Settings Submissions & Discussion Policy RSS Terms of
Service Ad Choices
washingtonpost.com © 1996-2024 The Washington Post
 * washingtonpost.com
 * © 1996-2024 The Washington Post
 * About The Post
 * Contact the Newsroom
 * Contact Customer Care
 * Request a Correction
 * Send a News Tip
 * Report a Vulnerability
 * Download the Washington Post App
 * Policies & Standards
 * Terms of Service
 * Privacy Policy
 * Cookie Settings
 * Print Products Terms of Sale
 * Digital Products Terms of Sale
 * Submissions & Discussion Policy
 * RSS Terms of Service
 * Ad Choices
 * Coupons




Already have an account? Sign in

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


TWO WAYS TO READ THIS ARTICLE:

Create an account or sign in
Free
 * Access this article

Enter email address
By selecting "Start reading," you agree to The Washington Post's Terms of
Service and Privacy Policy.
The Washington Post may use my email address to provide me occasional special
offers via email and through other platforms. I can opt out at any time.

Start reading
Subscribe
€2every 4 weeks
 * Unlimited access to all articles
 * Save stories to read later

Subscribe




WE CARE ABOUT YOUR PRIVACY

We and our 44 partners store and/or access information on a device, such as
unique IDs in cookies to process personal data. You may accept or manage your
choices by clicking below, including your right to object where legitimate
interest is used, or at any time in the privacy policy page. These choices will
be signaled to our partners and will not affect browsing data.

If you click “I accept,” in addition to processing data using cookies and
similar technologies for the purposes to the right, you also agree we may
process the profile information you provide and your interactions with our
surveys and other interactive content for personalized advertising.

If you do not accept, we will process cookies and associated data for strictly
necessary purposes and process non-cookie data as set forth in our Privacy
Policy (consistent with law and, if applicable, other choices you have made).


WE AND OUR PARTNERS PROCESS COOKIE DATA TO PROVIDE:

Actively scan device characteristics for identification. Create profiles for
personalised advertising. Use profiles to select personalised advertising.
Create profiles to personalise content. Use profiles to select personalised
content. Measure advertising performance. Measure content performance.
Understand audiences through statistics or combinations of data from different
sources. Develop and improve services. Store and/or access information on a
device. Use limited data to select content. Use limited data to select
advertising. List of Partners (vendors)

I Accept Reject All Show Purposes