Caribbean nations are stepping up efforts to combat transnational financial crime by strengthening cross-border cooperation through Joint Investigation Teams (JITs). According to the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), the initiative aims to help law enforcement agencies, prosecutors, customs authorities, and financial intelligence units work together more effectively to trace illicit assets, recover criminal proceeds, and disrupt organized crime.
Criminal networks continue to exploit legal and operational differences across Caribbean jurisdictions to facilitate money laundering, drug trafficking, arms smuggling, and human trafficking. The IDB says a coordinated regional approach is essential to tackle these increasingly sophisticated cross-border threats.
Joint Investigation Teams enable participating countries to conduct real-time investigations by sharing intelligence, coordinating operations, and pursuing criminal assets across multiple jurisdictions. The approach is designed to overcome the limitations of traditional legal assistance processes and improve the speed and effectiveness of financial crime investigations.
Through its ONE Caribbean regional program, the IDB is supporting specialized training, legal reforms, and institutional cooperation to help establish JITs as a sustainable regional tool. More than 180 professionals from across the Caribbean have already received training in financial investigations and asset recovery.
Regional organizations, national authorities, international development partners, and academic institutions are also collaborating to develop a common legal framework for Joint Investigation Teams. The initiative is expected to strengthen regional security, improve asset recovery efforts, enhance cooperation among law enforcement agencies, and build greater resilience against organized crime across the Caribbean.






