Pull to refresh
Logo
Daily Brief
Following
Why Ranks Sign Up
US designates Brazil's Comando Vermelho and PCC as terrorist organizations

US designates Brazil's Comando Vermelho and PCC as terrorist organizations

Rule Changes

Two of Brazil's largest criminal groups join the US terror list, exposing companies that operate in Brazil to American material-support law.

Today: Designations take legal effect

Overview

A company that pays a Brazilian gang for protection may now be breaking US law. On June 5, the US labeled two of Brazil's biggest criminal organizations, Comando Vermelho and the Primeiro Comando da Capital, as terrorist groups.

The label is more than symbolic. It pulls anyone with US ties who funds, supplies, or services these gangs into reach of American criminal courts, even when the payment was extorted at gunpoint.

Why it matters

Firms operating in Brazil now risk US prosecution for routine extortion payments to gangs, with penalties up to 20 years in prison.

Questions about this story

No questions yet — be the first to ask.

Key Indicators

2
Brazilian groups designated
Comando Vermelho and the PCC are the first Brazilian organizations added to the US terror list.
20 years
Maximum prison term for material support
Knowingly aiding a designated group can bring up to two decades in US prison under federal law.
132
Killed in October 2025 Rio raid
Brazil's deadliest police operation targeted Comando Vermelho strongholds weeks before the US action.
1968
Comando Vermelho origins
Both gangs began inside Brazilian prisons; the PCC formed in São Paulo in 1993.

Voices

Curated perspectives — historical figures and your fellow readers.

Ever wondered what historical figures would say about today's headlines?

Sign up to generate historical perspectives on this story.

Play

Exploring all sides of a story is often best achieved with Play.

Log in to play. Track your picks, climb the leaderboards. Log in Sign Up
Predict 3 ways this could play out. Contrarian picks score more — points lock when the scenario resolves. Log in to play
Higher or Lower Two numbers from this story. Guess which is bigger. 5 rounds to set a streak. Log in to play
Connections Sixteen names from the news. Find the four hidden groups of four. Log in to play

People Involved

Organizations Involved

Timeline

1993 June 2026

5 events Latest: Today
Tap a bar to jump to that date
  1. Designations take legal effect

    Today Rule Change

    Publication in the Federal Register makes the designations binding, freezing US assets and triggering material-support criminal liability.

  2. Brazil pushes back

    Reaction

    Lula's government rejects the label and orders a review of the economic impact on Brazilian banks and firms.

  3. Rubio announces terror designations

    Statement

    The State Department names Comando Vermelho and the PCC as Specially Designated Global Terrorists and moves to add them as Foreign Terrorist Organizations.

  4. Deadliest police raid in Brazil's history

    Force in Play

    Rio's Operation Containment against Comando Vermelho leaves at least 132 dead, drawing UN condemnation and global attention.

  5. PCC forms in São Paulo prison

    Background

    Inmates found the Primeiro Comando da Capital, which grows into Brazil's largest criminal network.

Historical Context

2 moments from history that rhyme with this story — and how they unfolded.

February 2025

US designates Mexican cartels as terrorist organizations (2025)

The US added six Mexican cartels, including Sinaloa and CJNG, plus Venezuela's Tren de Aragua, to the Foreign Terrorist Organization list. It was the first time the terror label was applied to Latin American drug groups at scale.

Then

Companies operating in Mexico faced new compliance reviews over cartel-linked payments and supply chains.

Now

It set the template now used against Brazil's gangs, treating profit-driven crime as a terror threat.

Why this matters now

The Brazilian designations extend the same legal tool used months earlier on Mexico and Venezuela.

October 1997

FARC placed on US terror list (1997)

The US designated Colombia's FARC rebels as a Foreign Terrorist Organization. The group blended Marxist politics with cocaine trafficking, blurring the line between insurgency and organized crime.

Then

The label justified US military and intelligence aid to Colombia under Plan Colombia.

Now

The FARC was removed from the list in 2021 after a 2016 peace deal, showing designations can be reversed.

Why this matters now

Brazil argues its gangs lack the FARC's ideology, the exact distinction the FARC case once tested.

Sources

(6)