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Buenos Aires Cracks Down on "Trapitos": Jail Time and Hefty Fines for Street Extortionists

19/06/2026 15:20 - Politica

Gráfico representativo de una balanza de justicia sobre un documento legal con el numero 6961, simbolizando la nueva legislación porteña.

The City of Buenos Aires has taken a decisive step in the fight against illegal occupation of public spaces. The Legislature approved Law 6961, known as the "Anti-Trapitos Law," which drastically toughens sanctions for informal parking attendants and windshield cleaners who operate illegally, introducing effective prison sentences and million-peso fines.

📍 What is a "Trapito"? Context for International Readers

In Argentina, "trapitos" (literally "little rags") are informal workers who claim public parking spaces as their territory. They demand payment from drivers for "watching" or "helping" park their vehicles. While some started as informal workers, many have evolved into organized extortion networks that intimidate citizens into paying for access to public streets. This phenomenon is similar to "flanelinhas" in Brazil or illegal parking attendants found in other Latin American and Mediterranean countries.


⚖️ New Penalties and Sanctions

The new legislation replaces the low-fine system with severe detention and economic penalties:

  • Street-level operators: Detention from 10 to 30 days.
  • Organized groups at events: Detention from 20 to 50 days when prior organization exists.
  • Leaders and organizers: Up to 60 days in jail.
  • Economic fines: Minimum floor raised to $1,139,988 Argentine pesos (approximately $1,000-1,200 USD at current exchange rates).
  • Community service: Expanded from 2 days to a range of 20 to 45 days.

Penalties double in cases of intimidation, persistence, or exploitation of driver vulnerability.

🎯 Control and Scope

The law exponentially expands control and enforcement capabilities:

  • Prohibition radius: Extended to 50 blocks around any event (approximately 5 km).
  • Hours: Operations apply from 6 hours before until 3 hours after any event.
  • Social programs: Organizers may be excluded from state benefits for up to 2 years.
  • Clubs and institutions: If complicity is proven, fines double (up to ~$20 million pesos) and closures can reach 90 days.

📊 Official Data: From Informal Work to Organized Extortion

The Buenos Aires government based the legislative change on the diagnosis that the "trapito" phenomenon has evolved from an informal service into an extortion structure. "If you're a trapito, you go to jail," summarized Mayor Jorge Macri on his X (formerly Twitter) account, emphasizing that these are mafias appropriating public streets.

Official data shows that between May 2025 and May 2026, authorities recorded 13,149 violations related to these practices, a figure that demonstrated the insufficiency of the previous penalty system.

Violation Type Previous Penalty New Penalty (Law 6961)
Street-level operator Small fine (often unpaid) 10-30 days detention
Organized group member N/A 20-50 days detention
Leader/Organizer N/A Up to 60 days jail
Economic fine (minimum) ~$50,000 pesos $1,139,988 pesos

✅ A New Paradigm in Urban Security

Law 6961 empowers the City Police to detain those who appropriate public space, marking a paradigm shift in urban security toward a stance of "zero tolerance" for citizen extortion. The legislation passed with 36 votes in favor and 19 against on June 18, 2026, demonstrating broad political consensus on this public safety priority.

Source: Buenos Aires Legislature, Government of the City of Buenos Aires. Official Gazette.

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Alfredo S. Quiroga