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Brazil authorities target organized crime in the fuel sector for billions of dollars

Brazil authorities target organized crime in the fuel sector for billions of dollars

The Brazilian federal police and the revenue service said that they launched operations against money laundering and fraud schemes related to organized crime and fuel sectors on Thursday.

According to authorities, the operations are aimed at dismantling schemes that have allegedly moved billions of dollars using investment funds and financial services firms to hide illicit gains, while also undermining Brazil’s fuel industry.

Since years, multinational energy companies have struggled to eradicate organized crime from their Brazilian distribution networks.

The "Hidden Carbon Operation", raids by the Tax Revenue Service, which the service claimed was the largest action ever against such crimes. Authorities served 350 search warrants in eight states to try and block assets worth over 1 billion reais (184.46 millions dollars).

In a press release, the revenue service claimed that these schemes involved fuel imports of more than 10 billion reals, gas station transactions worth 52 billion reals and fintechs transactions worth 46 billion reals between 2020 and 2024.

According to a recent court ruling, REAG Investimentos is one of the companies targeted by the warrants.

REAG stated in a filing that it "fully cooperated with the competent authority, providing the requested information and documents" as part "of the ongoing investigative procedure."

In a separate announcement, the federal police announced that they had launched simultaneously the "Quasar", and "Tank", operations. These were also meant to crack down on schemes allegedly moving more than 23 billion reals in the fuel industry.

The government announced that Justice Minister Ricardo Lewandowski and Finance Minister Fernando Haddad, as well as the Chief of Federal Police Andrei Rodrigues, would be commenting on the operation at a later press conference on Thursday.

(source: Reuters)