Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Paraguay Arrest Of Ex-Police Chief Exposes Brazil's Court Battle Over 2022


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Ex-PRF chief Silvinei Vasques was detained in Asunción while trying to fly to El Salvador.
  • The Supreme Court calls it a coup-plot case; many Brazilians call it political persecution.
  • 2026 may decide whether harsh sentences stand or are rewritten.

Silvinei Vasques, former head of Brazil's Federal Highway Police (PRF), was detained at Asunción's airport on December 26 as he tried to board a flight to El Salvador.

Investigators say he broke his court-ordered ankle monitor in Santa Catarina, crossed into Paraguay in a rented car, and carried a fake Paraguayan passport.

He was accompanied by his dog. Paraguay identified him at the airport, then handed him over near the Friendship Bridge for transfer to Brazil's Federal Police.

The trigger was a Supreme Federal Court (STF) ruling on December 16 sentencing him to 24 years and six months in prison.

Prosecutors say that on October 30, 2022, the presidential runoff, PRF road operations delayed buses and cars headed to polling stations. Lula won that vote.

The STF treats the alleged interference as part of a broader effort to overturn the result, and it ties that storyline to the January 8, 2023 attacks on federal buildings in Brasília.


Paraguay Arrest Of Ex-Police Chief Exposes Brazil's Court Battle Over 2022
Behind the legal file is a legitimacy war. Many Brazilians see overdue accountability. Many others reject the“coup plot” label, arguing the court is using criminal law to neutralize opponents and intimidate a right-leaning electorate.

A Datafolha survey published this week found 35% of Brazilians self-identify as right-leaning and 22% as left-leaning.

That split makes 2026 volatile. Jair Bolsonaro, sentenced to 27 years and three months in the same case, underwent hernia surgery on December 25 after receiving court permission to leave prison for treatment.

Congress has already advanced proposals to reduce sentences tied to January 8 convictions.

In the United States, Donald Trump's blanket clemency for more than 1,500 January 6 defendants in January 2025 showed how quickly prosecutions can be politically reinterpreted.

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The Rio Times

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