The Organized Crime Index | ENACT
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St. Lucia
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    Profile

    St. Lucia

    Capital

    Castries

    Gross domestic product (GDP)

    USD 1,691.28 million

    Income group

    Upper middle income

    Population

    179,651

    Area

    620 km²

    Geography type

    Island

    GINI Index

    51.2

    3.53-0.55

    Criminality score

    166th of 193 countries -27

    27th of 35 countries in Americas-1

    6th of 13 countries in Caribbean0

    Criminal markets

    2.67-0.38

    An assessment of the value, prevalence and non-monetary impacts of a specific crime type.

    Human trafficking

    4.000.00

    Illicit activity involving coercion, deception, abduction or fraud for the purpose of exploitation, regardless of the victim’s consent.

    Human smuggling

    1.500.00

    Activities by an organized crime group involving the illegal entry, transit or residence of migrants for a financial or material benefit.

    Extortion and protection racketeering

    1.00 n/a

    Crimes linked to exerting control over a territory/market including as a mediator and/or requesting a benefit in exchange for protection.

    Arms trafficking

    5.000.00

    The sale, acquisition, movement, and diversion of arms, their parts and ammunition from legal to illegal commerce and/or across borders.

    Trade in counterfeit goods

    2.00 n/a

    The production, transport, storage and sale of goods that are fraudulently mislabeled or fraudulent imitations of registered brands.

    Illicit trade in excisable goods

    1.50 n/a

    The illicit transport, handling and sale of excise consumer goods despite a ban or outside a legal market. Excludes oil and counterfeits.

    Flora crimes

    2.000.00

    The illicit trade and possession of species covered by CITES convention, and other species protected under national law.

    Fauna crimes

    1.000.00

    The poaching, illicit trade in and possession of species covered by CITES and other species protected by national law. Includes IUU fishing.

    Non-renewable resource crimes

    1.000.00

    The illicit extraction, smuggling, mingling, bunkering or mining of natural resources and the illicit trade of such commodities.

    Heroin trade

    1.000.00

    The production, distribution and sale of heroin. Consumption of the drug is considered in determining the reach of the criminal market.

    Cocaine trade

    7.500.50

    The production, distribution and sale of cocaine and its derivatives. Consumption is considered in determining the reach of the market.

    Cannabis trade

    7.000.00

    The illicit cultivation, distribution and sale of cannabis oil, resin, herb or leaves. Consumption is used to determine the market's reach.

    Synthetic drug trade

    1.000.00

    The production, distribution and sale of synthetic drugs. Consumption is considered in determining the reach of the market.

    Cyber-dependent crimes

    2.00 n/a

    Organized crimes that rely solely on using information communications technology with the aim of obtaining a monetary/material benefit.

    Financial crimes

    2.50 n/a

    Organized crime that results in a monetary loss via financial fraud, embezzlement, misuse of funds, tax evasion and abusive tax avoidance.

    Criminal actors

    4.40-0.73

    An assessment of the impact and influence of a specific criminal actor type on society.

    Mafia-style groups

    5.000.00

    Clearly defined organized crime groups that usually have a known name, defined leadership, territorial control and identifiable membership.

    Criminal networks

    4.000.00

    Loose networks of criminal associates engaging in criminal activities who fail to meet the defining characteristics of mafia-style groups.

    State-embedded actors

    5.00-0.50

    Criminal actors that are embedded in, and act from within, the state’s apparatus.

    Foreign actors

    6.000.00

    State and/or non-state criminal actors operating outside their home country. Includes foreign nationals and diaspora groups.

    Private sector actors

    2.00 n/a

    Profit-seeking individuals/entities who own/control a part of the legal economy free from the state, that collaborate with criminal actors.

    5.58-0.04

    Resilience score

    54th of 193 countries -5

    9th of 35 countries in Americas0

    2nd of 13 countries in Caribbean0

    Political leadership and governance

    7.500.00

    The State's role in responding to organized crime and its effectiveness. Strong political leadership/governance suggests higher resilience.

    Government transparency and accountability

    6.500.00

    The degree to which states have put oversight mechanisms in place to ensure against state collusion in illicit activities.

    International cooperation

    6.500.00

    A country's supranational structures and processes of interaction, policy making and concrete implementation to respond to organized crime.

    National policies and laws

    6.500.00

    A state's legal action and structures put in place to respond to organized crime.

    Judicial system and detention

    6.000.00

    Refers to a state’s judiciary’s power to effectively and independently enforce judgments on organized crime-related cases.

    Law enforcement

    4.500.00

    The state’s ability to investigate, gather intelligence, protect and enforce adherence to its rules and procedures against organized crime.

    Territorial integrity

    5.500.00

    The degree to which states are able to control their physical and cyber territory and infrastructure against organized criminal activities.

    Anti-money laundering

    4.000.00

    A state’s ability to implement measures to combat money laundering and other related threats to the integrity of its financial system.

    Economic regulatory capacity

    5.00-0.50

    The ability to control/manage the economy and regulate transactions (national and international) for trade to thrive within the rule of law.

    Victim and witness support

    5.000.00

    Assistance provided to victims of various forms of organized crime, including initiatives such as witness protection programs.

    Prevention

    6.000.00

    Refers to the existence of strategies, measures, resource allocation, programmes and processes that are aimed to inhibit organized crime.

    Non-state actors

    4.000.00

    The degree non-state actors are allowed to engage in OC responses and their roles in supporting State efforts/ as watchdogs to governments.

    5.58 4.40 2.67 5.58 4.40 2.67

    5.58-0.04

    Resilience score

    54th of 193 countries -5

    9th of 35 countries in Americas0

    2nd of 13 countries in Caribbean0

    Political leadership and governance

    7.500.00

    The State's role in responding to organized crime and its effectiveness. Strong political leadership/governance suggests higher resilience.

    Government transparency and accountability

    6.500.00

    The degree to which states have put oversight mechanisms in place to ensure against state collusion in illicit activities.

    International cooperation

    6.500.00

    A country's supranational structures and processes of interaction, policy making and concrete implementation to respond to organized crime.

    National policies and laws

    6.500.00

    A state's legal action and structures put in place to respond to organized crime.

    Judicial system and detention

    6.000.00

    Refers to a state’s judiciary’s power to effectively and independently enforce judgments on organized crime-related cases.

    Law enforcement

    4.500.00

    The state’s ability to investigate, gather intelligence, protect and enforce adherence to its rules and procedures against organized crime.

    Territorial integrity

    5.500.00

    The degree to which states are able to control their physical and cyber territory and infrastructure against organized criminal activities.

    Anti-money laundering

    4.000.00

    A state’s ability to implement measures to combat money laundering and other related threats to the integrity of its financial system.

    Economic regulatory capacity

    5.00-0.50

    The ability to control/manage the economy and regulate transactions (national and international) for trade to thrive within the rule of law.

    Victim and witness support

    5.000.00

    Assistance provided to victims of various forms of organized crime, including initiatives such as witness protection programs.

    Prevention

    6.000.00

    Refers to the existence of strategies, measures, resource allocation, programmes and processes that are aimed to inhibit organized crime.

    Non-state actors

    4.000.00

    The degree non-state actors are allowed to engage in OC responses and their roles in supporting State efforts/ as watchdogs to governments.

    Analysis

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    People

    St. Lucia is affected by human trafficking, but the market continues to be small-scale and primarily part of the sex worker industry. Nevertheless, this criminal market involves criminal groups that deceive and coerce men, women and children into sexual and labour exploitation. Victims are both St. Lucia nationals as well as regular and irregular migrants from other Caribbean nations (Haiti, Jamaica and the Dominican Republic) as well as Guyana and South Asia. Foreign women working in strip clubs are also vulnerable to sex trafficking. Local children, especially those of economically disadvantaged families, are particularly vulnerable to victimization in sex trafficking. They are often encouraged or forced by parents and caretakers to enter exploitation. Reportedly, women or older teenagers are active in recruiting younger adolescents and the perpetrators are often entrepreneurs from St. Lucia, India, China, Cuba and Russia. The increased social and economic vulnerabilities induced by the COVID-19 pandemic have provided fertile conditions for the continued grooming, recruitment and exploitation of unsuspecting victims, particularly women and girls.

    There are sporadic reports of arrivals and transits involving migrants, but no evidence of organized or systematic smuggling occurring. Regarding extortion perpetrated by organized crime groups, there is no data to prove the existence of this crime in the country.

    Trade

    Porous borders and a lack of intelligence contribute to arms trafficking on the island. St. Lucia’s proximity to Martinique led to the establishment of strong illicit trade routes between the two. These routes are well documented as part of the cocaine trade and suspected as facilitating arms trafficking as well. Allegedly, Venezuelan drug networks smuggle firearms into St. Lucia along with cocaine. The weapons are then used by local crime groups to secure their drug stockpiles. Alternatively, illegal arms shipments coming into St. Lucia from the US are exported to Martinique for onward transportation to mainland France. There has been an increase in murders in recent years on the island but evidence of a growing arms trafficking market is still scarce.

    Although there are low numbers of counterfeit goods circulating in the country, there is no evidence to suggest that the market is prevalent in the country. Similarly, although some excise goods are routinely smuggled inter-island across the Eastern Caribbean, this trade is not organized and is not taking place on any notable scale.

    Environment

    While an illicit market for orchids that are exported to France does exist, it does not appear to be a significant one. There is no evidence to suggest that either fauna or non-renewable resources crimes markets exist in St. Lucia.

    Drugs

    There is no evidence to suggest that an illicit heroin market exists, as there are no reported cases of heroin use or instances of seized heroin shipments coming into or through St. Lucia. Conversely, the country is a key Caribbean transit hub for cocaine shipments bound mainly for the US, Europe or Canada. Crucial to St. Lucia’s role in the cocaine trade is its proximity to Martinique, which has drawn Venezuelan crime groups. The latter usually deliver cocaine via fishing boats and offload the drugs at sea off the west coast of St. Lucia. Other groups may prefer offshore airdrops but, in both cases, local traffickers collect the goods in small boats and stockpile them along the island’s coastline. Such shipments have recently decreased in frequency, but increased in quantity. Subsequently, cocaine is trafficked to Martinique or loaded onto yachts destined directly for Europe. Cocaine is consumed locally, but its prevalence is not large and is arguably a by-product of cocaine transiting through the country, as is violence and murder.

    Cannabis is produced and consumed on the island and is therefore a highly prevalent narcotic. Cannabis is also smuggled from St. Vincent and the Grenadines on fishing vessels or inter-island freight vessels moving through St. Lucian territorial waters. In cultivation areas of cannabis crops, eradication activities are conducted. For this reason, the production of cannabis is also a big risk to St. Lucia’s forests, given that cultivators threaten biodiversity with alien plants, cutting down the virgin forest as well as endangering natural flora. At least 69 native species have already disappeared in connection with cannabis crops.

    Reports have noted sporadic seizures of ecstasy coming into the country from the UK, but domestic use or organized trafficking of synthetic drugs is still assessed to be non-existent.

    Cyber Crimes

    Little is known currently about the level of cybercrime in St. Lucia. However, it is likely that the market currently exerts minimal influence, with the potential for an upward trend in the coming years.

    Financial Crimes

    There is evidence of financial crime occurring in the country. There have been some cases of fraudulent sales via social media, specifically scams directed at farmers, but there are no reported cases of embezzlement or misuse of funds. St. Lucia does provide offshore financial services as well as citizenship by investment schemes, which create vulnerabilities for illicit activities in the country.

    Criminal Actors

    Local gangs in St. Lucia reportedly provide essential services in some areas of the country, such as security and transport, for which they are paid in cash, arms or drugs. Moreover, these gangs seem to have capitalized on the economic fallout driven by the COVID-19 pandemic, with an increase in members targeting schoolchildren to recruit them. Competition between different gangs might lead to violence, including homicide. Besides drug distribution, these entities are also allegedly involved in robberies and extortion, and operate primarily in Castries, Gros Islet and Vieux Fort. Drug routes, however, are mainly controlled by international traffickers, who collaborate with local criminal networks. Less organized domestic gangs are in fact known to be active and present in the country, mainly to provide assistance to foreign actors.

    Although there are strong indications that corrupt officials facilitate criminal operations (including, for example, some customs officers facilitating the import of cocaine and firearms on a semi-regular basis), evidence of state-embedded actors systematically working with crime organizations is scarce. Similarly, indications of private sector actors facilitating illicit financial flows and money laundering are minimal.

    Leadership and governance

    The government holds a firm stance on serious crime, evident in the country’s development plan, spanning 2019–2022, now being extended with the Medium-term Development Strategy for 2020–2023. The democratic process is independent and protected from criminal influence, although corruption and inadequate transparency are recognized as problematic. International observers report corruption perceptions in St. Lucia to be low to moderate, in spite of allegations of corruption against some high-profile political figures in the country. Several national bodies are tasked with anti-corruption. However, they are somewhat constrained due to inadequate funding. The country also has an array of regulations to combat corruption, although they are not regularly enforced.

    St. Lucia is a party to a number of international treaties and conventions pertaining to organized crime and corruption. The country cooperates effectively with partners, albeit mainly on areas related to drug trafficking, including through membership of the Regional Security System. St. Lucia has a fairly strong and up-to-date legal framework, influenced by the UK legal system. St. Lucia’s legislation focuses mostly on drug trafficking and gang-related activity.

    Criminal justice and security

    The judiciary is generally independent, and corruption in the judicial system has not been identified as a major obstacle. The right to a fair trial in St. Lucia is also guaranteed but the legal system is notorious for its slow delivery of justice, which results in a growing backlog of cases and long stays of pre-trial detention. The prison system is also under pressure, with overcrowding reportedly being an issue. In spite of some instances of guards beating inmates, the country’s only prison meets international prison standards.

    The Royal St. Lucia Police Force (RSLPF) is the main agency responsible for maintaining law and order in the country. The RSLPF, unlike St. Lucia’s Customs, enjoys high levels of public trust, although police brutality and excessive use of force have damaged its reputation in recent years. Reports of impunity also persist and are likely due to the inefficiency of the judicial system, particularly the lack of resources, and the strong public and political support for the police. Furthermore, law enforcement agencies in St. Lucia continue to suffer from a severe lack of funding. There are two specialized units within the RSLPF – the Drug Squad and the Marine Unit – which, along with Customs and Ports Police are responsible for curbing trafficking flows to and through St. Lucia.

    Additionally, the country faces the threat of porous borders and lack of intelligence, which prove to be the main issues related to the country’s territorial integrity. St. Lucia’s vulnerability to trafficking flows is all the more apparent in the country’s proximity to Martinique – a direct path for drugs to Europe. An anti-crime network was established between the two islands in 2021, in the hope of reducing cross-border crime significantly.

    Economic and financial environment

    St. Lucia is vulnerable to money laundering and the country has taken some steps in fighting this threat, notably through the implementation of an operational financial intelligence unit that is responsible for money laundering prevention. Money laundering that takes place in the country is mostly related to the drugs trade and the profits generated by domestic and foreign criminals. It most commonly occurs through structured deposits and cash remittances to a funnel account, as well as integration of illicit cash through real estate and cash-intensive businesses. It is also alleged that financial institutions in the country are inadvertently involved in currency transactions that move proceeds from the international drug trade.

    St. Lucia has in place adequate policies and laws to promote fair competition, while setting a clear framework for both foreign and domestic investors. Thus, the economic regulatory environment is conducive to doing business, which is why St. Lucia has managed to draw foreign direct investment in a number of economic sectors, including offshore banking, transhipment and tourism. Nevertheless, the country is considered a tax haven and this characteristic could lead to the hiding of assets in order to evade tax obligations.

    Civil society and social protection

    There is no official register or monitoring system for specialized facilities that provide treatment services for people with problems associated with drug use. Drug-related issues are addressed by the country’s primary healthcare facilities. Support mechanisms for victims of trafficking are not well established either. Usually, NGOs provide shelters for victims when need arises. However, recently, there have been increasing efforts demonstrated by the government anti-trafficking capacity in updating standard operating procedures for victim identification and referral to protective services – funding an NGO for victim assistance, among others. State-funded drug and alcohol rehabilitation centres in St. Lucia were created to be an affordable option for those who need help but cannot pay for services. As for the prevention efforts, emphasis has been placed on drug abuse prevention programmes targeting key populations. In addition, authorities have offered training on drug abuse prevention, treatment and research to police officers, counsellors, prison guards and other professionals.

    In general, NGO involvement in issues pertaining to organized crime is rather limited, with local NGOs mainly focused on education, health and gender issues. Nevertheless, there are NGOs that focus on crime-related issues, including victim support and drug demand reduction. Freedom of the press is guaranteed by law and upheld in practice. Nevertheless, criminal libel laws are in effect and, at times, used against journalists.

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    The criminal markets score is represented by the pyramid base size and the criminal actors score is represented by the pyramid height, on a scale ranging from 1 to 10. The resilience score is represented by the panel height, which can be identified by the side of the panel.

    How to measure organized crime?

    A series of 13 discussion papers, one for each illicit market considered during the development of the Index.

    Read more on globalinitiative.net
    How to measure organized crime?

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    This report was funded in part by a grant from the United States Department of State.

    ENACT is funded by the European Union and implemented by the Institute for Security Studies and INTERPOL, in affiliation with the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime.

    The opinions, findings and conclusions stated herein are those of the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime and do not necessarily reflect those of the United States Department of State.