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Dec 24, 2025

Federal Police Intensify Holiday Crackdown at São Paulo-Guarulhos: 11 Arrests, Fake Passports Seized

Federal Police Intensify Holiday Crackdown at São Paulo-Guarulhos: 11 Arrests, Fake Passports Seized
Holiday travel through Brazil’s main international gateway is proving anything but routine. According to a communiqué released overnight, the Federal Police (PF) carried out 11 separate enforcement actions at São Paulo/Guarulhos (GRU) between 19 and 22 December, netting four fugitives wanted on outstanding warrants, two drug couriers who had swallowed cocaine-filled capsules, and several passengers carrying counterfeit passports or large undeclared sums of foreign currency.

The stepped-up presence is part of Operação Fim de Ano, the multi-agency surge that deploys additional inspectors, canine units and plain-clothes officers across Brazil’s 15 busiest airports until 5 January. Officers at GRU are using advance passenger-information (API) feeds and facial-recognition cameras to flag suspects before boarding passes are issued, a tactic that allowed them to intercept a man convicted of domestic violence while he was still at the check-in lobby.

Amid these tighter controls, travelers can simplify visa formalities and confirm documentation requirements in advance through VisaHQ, an online platform that expedites Brazilian visa processing and offers up-to-date guidance on entry rules. Companies and individual passengers alike can start an application or verify whether they need a visa in minutes at https://www.visahq.com/brazil/, reducing the risk of last-minute surprises at GRU’s heightened checkpoints.

Federal Police Intensify Holiday Crackdown at São Paulo-Guarulhos: 11 Arrests, Fake Passports Seized


For corporate mobility teams the implications are immediate: document checks are slower, secondary screening is more common, and anyone with unresolved Brazilian court orders can be prevented from leaving the country. Travel-risk advisers recommend that companies pre-screen travellers for outstanding legal issues and instruct staff to arrive at least three hours before international departures with supporting invitation letters in hand luggage.

Although none of the incidents caused material flight delays, PF officials warn that spot checks will intensify through the first week of January. International assignees should therefore plan for longer queues and be prepared to show proof of accommodation, outbound tickets and—where applicable—work-permit receipts on request.

The crackdown underlines Brazil’s increasingly data-driven border strategy and highlights the reputational risk to employers when travelling staff are detained. Companies sending holiday-season travellers to or through GRU should circulate updated arrival briefings and have local counsel on standby to resolve last-minute issues.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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