Puerto Rican name for a group of residential buildings at
low-cost, generally paid by the
government. The name is given is either because it is a group of "casas" or homes (therefore "
case-rio") or after the word "caza" meaning hunting, because these buildings are famous, especially in the metropolitan area and
Ponce, for daily shootings and killings between drug dealers and mobsters. Though most people living in "caserios" are decent people who cannot afford to pay a more expensive home or lease an aparment that
may cost about $500 or more per month because do not have a
job or do the earn enough, most of them have a minor group of people who own drug dealerships (or "puntos de drogas") and within a caserio itself there
may be more than one dealership which is the cause for daily fights and shootings between rival groups. A caserio in Puerto Rico is similar or equivalent to a ghetto in the United States, though ghettos can be significantly more dangerous, since caserios in areas outside San Juan metro area and
Ponce do not have that much violence.