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How SA features in the web of ‘most-wanted’ Uruguayan narcotrafficking accused Sebastian Marset

In a wobbly self-shot video from a stationary car, Uruguayan drug lord Sebastián Marset, now on the DEA's most-wanted list and embroiled in a web of international intrigue, attempts to distance himself from accusations while his alleged cartel operations stretch from South America to South African cellphones and Dubai scandals.
How SA features in the web of  ‘most-wanted’ Uruguayan narcotrafficking accused Sebastian Marset Sebastian Marset. (Photos: US Department of State)

A man wearing big sunglasses and a medical mask faces the camera as he talks in Spanish while seated in what appears to be a stationary car.

The footage is somewhat wobbly, suggesting he’s holding a cellphone and filming himself.

Screengrab of Sebastian Marset in a video sent to the media in Uruguay.
Screengrab of Sebastian Marset in a video sent to the media in Uruguay.

This man says he is Sebastian Marset – a suspected international drug trafficker and money launderer from Uruguay, who is involved in South American soccer, and who has an astounding past that bleeds into high-level political scandals.

The 34-year-old, whose full name is Sebastian Enrique Marset Cabrera, is accused of heading the Primer Cartel Uruguayo, or First Uruguayan Cartel.

He was recently added to the United States Drug Enforcement Administration’s (DEA) most wanted list.

In May 2025, the DEA also offered a reward of up to $2-million for information leading to Marset’s arrest.

That reward is linked to the biggest investigation into cocaine trafficking in Paraguay’s history.

South Africa and suspicions

A few years ago, in August 2022, the video of Marset, showing him talking while apparently seated in a car, was sent to overseas media.

In it, he distanced himself from several accusations.

This country fits into this saga because the video was apparently sent from a South African cellphone number.

Wanted drug trafficking accused Sebastian Marset. (Photo: Supplied)
Wanted drug trafficking accused Sebastian Marset. (Photo: Supplied)

That same month, August 2022, international affairs prosecutor Manuel Doldan was quoted in Paraguayan media saying Marset’s location was under investigation to determine if he had been in South Africa or if technology was used to mask where the video was actually sent from.

Emails from Daily Maverick to an address listed for Doldan were not responded to last week.

Read more: SA’s drug dons — where are they now plus the political suspicions surrounding them

The Embassy of Uruguay in South Africa told Daily Maverick: “The Embassy… does not have any comments regarding your questions.”

When Daily Maverick asked the Hawks if Marset had been flagged in this country, spokesperson Colonel Katlego Mogale asked if this journalist had a case number.

The journalist did not have a case number and did not query a specific crime, but whether authorities were aware of Marset.

No answer was provided by the time of publication as to whether the Hawks had flagged him.

In 2023, police in Bolivia tried to arrest Marset, who later released another video effectively thanking officers there for tipping him off about that plan.

Several other issues tied to Marset, meanwhile, are indirectly connected to South Africa.

Detained, Dubai, released

Dubai is central to one of these.

Daily Maverick has before reported on how a drug trafficking “supercartel”, consisting of various crime groups from several countries, was headquartered there.

The so-called supercartel appeared to have ties to places including Durban.

Read more: Connecting the global drug trafficking dots – Durban and Dubai linked to cocaine smuggling ‘supercartel’

As for Marset, in 2021 he was detained in Dubai because of an issue relating to a false passport.

He managed to get another passport while in custody – this became a scandal that saw the resignation of Uruguayan government officials – and was released from Dubai detention in early 2022.

Marset, according to the US, is now “a most-wanted fugitive throughout the Southern Cone of South America, charged with organised crime violations in Paraguay and Bolivia”.

Brazil

There were previous suspicions that he may have been in Mozambique.

These were similar to suspicions, some later confirmed, that once surrounded Brazil’s Gilberto Aparecido Dos Santos, who headed the notorious First Capital Command gang, to which Marset is suspected of having ties.

Daily Maverick has previously reported that Dos Santos used false documents in South Africa under the name of Luiz Gomes de Jesus before he was arrested in Mozambique in 2020.

Read more: Blood ties: South Africa caught in a web of murderous, drug-smuggling Brazilian gangs

In 2022, Dos Santos was sentenced to 26 years in jail in Brazil for crimes including drug trafficking.

Strong narco-conduits connect South Africa and Brazil.

Marset’s alleged drug trafficking organisation operated via various countries, including Brazil.

Transnational money laundering

Last month, on 21 May, the US Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Virginia announced that an indictment against Marset had been unsealed “for his alleged role in laundering proceeds of his drug-trafficking organisation”.

A statement also said that Federico Ezequiel Santoro Vassallo, also known as Capitan, was someone close to Marset and had pleaded guilty to laundering narco-trafficking income.

It alleged Marset was the head “of a large-scale drug trafficking organisation that distributed thousands of kilograms of cocaine, including as many as ten tons at a time, from South America typically to Europe.”

Cocaine was allegedly trafficked in places including Bolivia, Paraguay, Belgium and Brazil.

“Santoro and, allegedly, Marset threatened violence to protect their drug-trafficking and money laundering activities,” the US attorney’s office statement said.

“In January 2021, Marset allegedly was owed more than €17-million from the proceeds of a single shipment of cocaine. 

“Santoro arranged the collection and laundering of at least €5-million of those funds, the vast majority of which was laundered using the US banking system.”

As for Marset, the $2-million reward (which is in addition to a $100,000 reward Bolivia offered in 2023) for his arrest and conviction came about after a project codenamed Operation A Ultranza Py.

Reward poster for Marset US Department of State.
Reward poster for Sebastian Marset, US Department of State.

The US described it as: “The largest and most consequential organised crime investigation… against cocaine trafficking in Paraguayan history.”

In the family

Last year, Marset’s partner Gianina García Troche was detained in Spain.

She was reportedly extradited from there to Paraguay a couple of weeks ago.

The year before her detention, in December 2023, Marset’s brother Diego Nicolás Marset Alba, who is now about 24 years old, was arrested in Brazil.

Diego Nicolás Marset Alba, brother of wanted drug trafficking accused Sebastian Marset, was arrested in Brazil in 2023. (Photo: Interpol)
Diego Nicolás Marset Alba, brother of wanted drug trafficking accused Sebastian Marset, was arrested in Brazil in 2023. (Photo: Interpol)

“[He] had been avoiding arrest for many years by using multiple false identities from Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay,” a statement by the international police organisation, Interpol, said at the time.

The timing of the younger Marset’s arrest was connected to his wife’s pregnancy.

 

“Interpol shared intelligence that his wife was nearing childbirth in Foz de Iguacu, Brazil,” the statement said.

“Foreseeing Marset’s potential visit to Brazil for the birth, officers from Brazil’s Federal Police monitored the wife’s residence and arrested the fugitive when he arrived at her home.”

Interpol’s statement said that Diego Marset was suspected of being “a central figure in the trafficking of drugs from South America to Europe and is also linked to several high-profile killings.”

Prosecutor killed in Colombia

Accusations around the elder Marset and one specific high-profile 2022 killing emerged previously.

In May 2022, Paraguayan prosecutor Marcelo Daniel Pecci Albertini, better known as Marcelo Pecci, was fatally shot on a beach while on honeymoon with his wife in Colombia.

Pecci worked against drug trafficking and organised crime.

The US Department of State had offered a $5-million reward for information leading to Pecci’s killers.

“Five of… six individuals were arrested in Colombia and quickly convicted and sentenced to 23½ years of imprisonment. 

“One of the transporters remains a fugitive,” a department statement from 2022 said.

“Investigators are also seeking those individuals believed to have hired
the hit team in Colombia.”

Pecci’s murder happened about three months after Marset had been released from detention in Dubai and about three months before the video of him, with possible ties to South Africa, surfaced.

Marset’s name has before been referred to concerning what happened to Pecci.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro posted on X about Marset.

One of his posts (translated from Spanish) says: “The investigation into the murder of Paraguayan prosecutor Marcelo Pecci by Uruguayan drug trafficker Marset in Colombia demonstrates that drug trafficking long ago ceased to be a bilateral Colombian-American problem and is now an American and global problem.” DM

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