In the 1960s and early 1970s, there existed a radical left-wing group in Uruguay, the Tupamaros, that engaged in violence, bank robberies, kidnappings, interrogations of people they captured, propaganda efforts including taking over radio stations, had a cell-based structure with code names with cells from 2 to 6 people, had people from all different walks of life from uneducated peasants to educated professionals, had sleeper agents inside the military and police, and engaged in urban combat in the city of Montevideo, the capital of Uruguay which had most of its population.
The methods of the Tupamaros were virtually identical to those of the Liberal Crime Squad in the game Liberal Crime Squad, and for about a decade they successfully operated and gained more and more influence. The nation of Uruguay went from spending 1% of its annual budget on the military to 26% in order to defeat the Tupamaros, and the country went from being a fairly corrupt but still democratic country to having a military coup in 1973 as a result of what could be termed the "counterrevolutionary" response to the ultimately failed revolution the Tupamaros had spent years working towards.
Originally they had actually started out as a fairly nonviolent group but they did engage in robberies from the beginning in order to raise funds, and soon began doing kidnappings, although they would typically release the people they kidnapped after a few days. A few times they did kill people they had kidnapped, including an FBI agent who the U.S. government had sent to Uruguay to advise its government in how to fight the Tupamaros. At their peak they were very popular, but public opinion ended up turning against them after they became more violent.
The Tupamaros of Uruguay had so many parallels to the Liberal Crime Squad it is amazing. There is a Wikipedia article about them here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tupamaros. However there is a 1973 short book about them which is available as a PDF here:
http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/uruguay/Tupamaros.pdf (hosted on a website run by Professor Antonio de la Cova, formerly of the University of Indiana, currently at the University of South Carolina). In that book, which you can read in your web browser as a PDF, which nowadays no longer requires a browser plugin, they sound almost exactly like the Liberal Crime Squad. They turned out rather like playing a game of Liberal Crime Squad where you do pretty well but the government ends up apprehending and imprisoning your leadership and there is nobody left able to lead.
As a footnote, one of the former Tupamaros, years later, after the military dictatorship had ended and there was political amnesty both for those involved in the dictatorship as well as anyone who had engaged in any political violence for the last few decades, José Mujica, was eventually elected President of Uruguay in late 2009, taking office in 2010, and leaving office in 2015 after another politician from the same political party as him (the Broad Front) won the 2014 Presidential elections. They have elections every 5 years for President and Presidents there serve 5-year terms. José Mujica was not as radical at this age and governed as a center-left leader, but successfully pursued progressive policies including legalizing marijuana, and he left the country in very good shape after his 5 years in office and handed it over to someone else in a peaceful transition of power. He had spent 13 years imprisoned, one of 9 Tupamaros leaders who spent 13 years in prison.
There was a 10th prominent leader of the Tupamaros who turned traitor against the other Tupamaros and sold them out to the Uruguayan government and helped bring about their downfall by being an informant from within, Héctor Amodio Pérez, widely denounced as a traitor, someone not respected or liked by anyone in Uruguay, since nobody likes traitors. He fled Uruguay to Spain in 1973 with the assistance of the Uruguayan government after helping them destroy the Tupamaros.
So, Liberal Crime Squad is not that far detached from reality, and what happens in the game really did happen once upon a time in the nation of Uruguay as a true story in an almost identical way. I thought people who enjoy the game might be interested in this. I would note that this connection between the Liberal Crime Squad and Tupamaros is entirely coincidental, and Liberal Crime Squad was not patterned after them at all. This is just a coincidence. Truth is stranger than fiction. The story of the real-world Liberal Crime Squad, the Tupamaros of Uruguay, who operated in a virtually identical fashion to the LCS in the game, is certainly an interesting one.
There is actually a movie about the Tupamaros called "State of Siege", a 1972 French film which received excellent reviews but which the U.S. government at the time harshly condemned. You could consider it "Liberal Crime Squad: The Movie". It is based on a true story, although many elements of the movie are fictionalized, for instance the names of the characters are all fictional and it was not actually filmed in Uruguay and the film is in French rather than the Spanish spoken in Uruguay. "State of Siege" is almost exactly 2 hours long and a 1972 French film, also going by the title "État de Siège", for anyone who wants to find this movie. The exact length of the film is 2 hours, 1 minute, and 34 seconds. To watch it legally, it is available from the Criterion Collection from their own website as well as on various other sites, it can be legally bought on DVD or BluRay or legally rented as a digital movie to watch on YouTube or iTunes or VUDU (and of course it has English subtitles). A friend of mine used to have a VHS tape of it but he lost it. I am NOT telling anyone how to get this movie illegally, of course, since that would go against the forum rules among other reasons.
Anyway, I just think the Tupamaros being so similar to the Liberal Crime Squad is very cool, although the fact that their actions helped lead to a backlash where the formerly peaceful and democratic nation of Uruguay became a military dictatorship for over a decade, from 1973 to 1985, that was awful, and they did commit many horrible crimes and I do not approve of that either, I just find the historical parallels of this group to the game to be amazing, even the detail of squads or cells having a maximum of 6 members, all using code names, is both true in the real Tupamaros as well as the game Liberal Crime Squad. So many details are identical, it is just the most amazing coincidence.