Un magazzino della polizia con armi sequestrate alle gang o usate in omicidi e crimini vari. Ci sono moltissimi depositi come questo a Tegucigalpa nella speranza che queste armi prima o poi possano essere usate come prove in un processo. (Sean Sutton/Panos Pictures for The Washington Post)
Gli agenti di polizia vanno in giro mascherati per evitare violenze e ritorsioni contro loro o i loro cari. In questa foto due agenti portano con sé un sospetto spacciatore dopo un raid a Tegucigalpa. (Sean Sutton/Panos Pictures for The Washington Post)
A man lies dead June 4, 2014 in Honduras' capital, Tegucigalpa, after gunmen drove up and opened fire while he was reading a newspaper with his car door open. The man was shot 13 times at close range outside his workplace. The reason for the killing was unknown, but many businessmen have been slain for failing to pay fees extorted by the gangs. Photographer Sean Sutton spent nearly three weeks with police who are fighting violent crime that is blamed for many Hondurans sending their children to the United States illegally in search of a safer life. Part of photo essay with introductory text HONDURAS (category i), (c) 2014, The Washington Post. Moved Monday, Aug. 4, 2014. (MUST CREDIT: Photo by Sean Sutton/Panos Pictures for The Washington Post)
Una camera refrigerata dell'obitorio di Tegucigalpa, con cinque corpi: tutte persone uccise nella mattinata del 3 giugno 2014. (Sean Sutton/Panos Pictures for The Washington Post)
Una ragazzina con sua mamma durante un raid della polizia nel Barrio Abajo, un quartiere di Tegucigalpa dove le gang sono più forti. (Sean Sutton/Panos Pictures for The Washington Post)