Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Banco Master CPI Final Report Vote Tuesday


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

- Senate's Organized Crime CPI votes on its final report Tuesday, April 14 - its last day of existence after Alcolumbre refused a 60-day extension

- Rapporteur Alessandro Vieira's report will label Banco Master a "money laundering conduit" and cite regulatory failures by the Central Bank and CVM

- Documents revealed R$65 million ($12.3 million) in payments to firms linked to former ministers and ex-president Michel Temer between 2023 and 2025

The Banco Master CPI chapter reaches its climax on Tuesday when the Senate's Organized Crime Commission votes on its final report - a document that rapporteur Alessandro Vieira (MDB-SE) has promised will label the bank a billion-dollar money laundering conduit. The vote marks the commission's last day of existence, closing one of Brazil's most explosive financial investigations.

The Rio Times, the Latin American financial news outlet, reports that Senate President Davi Alcolumbre (União-AP) refused to extend the CPI's mandate despite a formal request backed by 28 senators - one more than the minimum required. Alcolumbre cited the electoral calendar, drawing sharp criticism from Vieira, who called the decision "a disservice to Brazil."

From Organized Crime to Banco Master CPI Focus

Installed in November 2025 to map Brazil's criminal organizations, the CPI pivoted to Banco Master as investigators followed the money. Over four months, the commission processed roughly 180 requests and received 124 document packages.

Of those, approximately 100 targeted Banco Master specifically - including around 50 hearing summons and 30 secrecy-breaking orders. Investigators estimate the bank moved R$12 billion ($2.3 billion) through irregular CDB issuances before the Central Bank liquidated it in November 2025 and police arrested founder Daniel Vorcaro at Guarulhos Airport.

The R$65 Million Political Web

Documents delivered to the CPI revealed R$65 million ($12.3 million) in payments from Banco Master to companies linked to former ministers, party leaders, and ex-president Michel Temer between 2023 and 2025. Temer's firm received R$10 million ($1.9 million), though he stated his contracted fee was R$7.5 million ($1.4 million) without explaining the discrepancy.

Former finance ministers Henrique Meirelles and Guido Mantega both confirmed consulting contracts with the bank. A company associated with former Salvador mayor ACM Neto received R$5.4 million ($1 million), while R$6.1 million ($1.2 million) went to a firm used by relatives of Justice Minister Ricardo Lewandowski.

Separately, the CPI uncovered R$80.2 million ($15.1 million) in payments to a law firm run by the wife of Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes. That revelation fueled a parallel push for a dedicated CPI targeting links between the judiciary and the bank, which has already gathered 40 of 81 Senate signatures.

Galípolo Testifies, Campos Neto No-Shows

Central Bank President Gabriel Galípolo appeared before the committee on April 8, confirming a December 2024 meeting with President Lula and Vorcaro at the Planalto. He described it as "strictly institutional" and denied discussing Banco Master with Supreme Court justices.

Former Central Bank President Roberto Campos Neto failed to appear three consecutive times. His most recent no-show was protected by a Supreme Court ruling from Justice André Mendonça that made his attendance optional.

Tuesday's Endgame and What Comes Next

The final session begins at 9am with testimony from former Rio de Janeiro Governor Cláudio Castro, summoned to address the state's failures in combating organized crime. Vieira will then read the final report and put it to a vote.

The document is expected to include a dedicated chapter labeling Banco Master a case study in institutional infiltration, identify regulatory failures by the Central Bank and CVM, and recommend indictments - though the final list of names remained under negotiation as of Monday.

The CPI's closure does not end the investigation. The Federal Police's criminal probe continues, and an STF mandamus to compel Alcolumbre to install a standalone Banco Master CPI is now assigned to Justice Kassio Nunes Marques. The Senate already has 53 of 81 signatures - well above the threshold - but Alcolumbre has blocked it for months.

For investors, the immediate question is whether Tuesday's report names specific companies or funds facing follow-up prosecution, and whether the parallel push gains enough momentum to force Alcolumbre's hand before the electoral recess.

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The Rio Times

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