How did a Chilean barely old enough to order himself a beer in Miami quickly wind up exporting $80 million in contraband gold? It all started with a Google search. It ended with a sweeping international investigation exposing a black market that adds literally tons of illegally mined and contraband gold to the international economy every year.
From Bloomberg:
In the past decade and a half, global gold consumption has risen by almost 1,000 tons a year, to about 4,300 tons, according to the World Gold Council, a London-based industry group. Legal mining operations haven't kept up with demand, so illegal mines controlled by criminal gangs, from the Amazon to central Africa, help cover the deficit. ... A 2016 Verité study found that five countries in Latin America shipped 40 tons of gold from illegal mines to the U.S. in one year, almost twice the legal exports from those countries. South America's illegal gold mines, most of them in the Amazon basin, are toxic pits in which mobs of laborers use fire hoses and mercury to extract nearly pure gold nuggets from the red earth. According to a finding by the United Nations, the industry thrives on child labor, devastates the environment, and enables prostitution at ramshackle camps around the mines. The gold moves from smuggler to smuggler, then into a network of refiners and traders, all feeding the world's voracious demand.
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