They range from extremely powerful, tightly structured mafias, like the Serbian, Morrocan and Dutch groups, to gangs of small-time burglars. Most groups specialise in one or more of the various activities that revolve around trafficking drugs: buying merchandise, protection and security, transportation, distribution, money laundering. Almost none of these groups can manage the whole process by themselves, which makes collaboration essential.
A prosecutor in the region put it like this: âAnyone who thinks that the criminal organisations are the same as they were before â structured like a pyramid, managing every aspect of the business â well, theyâre wrong. Itâs not like that any more. Itâs a lot more like in the TV series ZeroZeroZero, where everyone has to form alliances and each group takes on certain things. Theyâre not cartels, theyâre service providers: itâs the Uberisation of organised crime.â Because of this, thereâs also no division of territory. âItâs not possible to make a map, like theyâve done, for example, with Mexico,â he says. âInstead, youâd have to make a diagram that reflects the division of labour, the different roles and activities of each organisation.â
The groups in Costa del Sol, said one Marbella-based drug trafficker, âare talking with each other all day long, asking each other questionsâ. Everyone knows everything, he said, âand almost everyone knows each otherâ. Meetings take place in discreet locations: shopping centres, fast-food restaurants or parks, or during a stroll through a public garden in a luxury development.
While there might not be any clearly marked territories on the Costa del Sol, each group has its own stomping grounds â the businesses and other locations they frequent and control. And itâs important, the trafficker said, sipping his drink, that everyone knows the rules. âIf a Brit walks into an Albanian gym, for example, heâs gonna have a problem.â The Irish have their own pubs in Puerto BanĂșs; the Moroccans have their own bars, where thereâs no (public) alcohol consumption but they smoke shisha; the Colombians hang out at the shopping centres; the Camorra have their pizzerias, and there are specific hotels for English gangsters. The police know a lot of these places by name.
Beyond its own frontiers, Marbella is inextricably linked to Dubai by crime.
Most of the areaâs criminal groups live between these two cities. âDubai is like Marbella but with no rules and no law,â said one high-level Costa del Sol criminal. âItâs extremely rare for them to arrest anyone there. Itâs only happened a few times, and always for some underlying political reason. Most of the top bosses live there, and then they spend the summer in Marbella. The soldados go to Dubai when they feel like theyâre under surveillance. Weâre protected there. Thereâs no extradition.â

