Gilmar Mendes And Brazil's Supreme Court (STF): A Complete Guide
| Year | Case / Action | Outcome / Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 2008 | Op. Satiagraha - Daniel Dantas | Granted habeas corpus twice within 48 hours; sparked "police state" allegations; 134 judges signed petition opposing Mendes's decision |
| 2013 | Blocked judicial oversight legislation | First time in Brazilian history the judiciary halted a bill before congressional approval |
| 2019–20 | Glenn Greenwald / Vaza Jato | Ruled any criminal investigation of Greenwald for journalism unconstitutional under press freedom protections |
| 2021 | Lava Jato / Lula convictions annulled | Key role in rehabilitating Lula, enabling 2022 presidential candidacy and return to power |
| 2024 | RE 635.659 - cannabis decriminalization | As rapporteur, guided landmark ruling decriminalizing personal cannabis possession |
| Jun 2025 | Social media liability - 8–3 ruling | Voted to hold Meta, X, Microsoft liable for illegal user content; Art. 19 struck down |
| Dec 2025 | Solo impeachment restriction ruling | Attempted to restrict impeachment standing to the PGR alone; partially reversed after bipartisan backlash |
| Apr 2026 | Filed to suspend STF nepotism trial | Halted case on whether officials can appoint relatives to political positions - with direct implications for the court itself |
No other current STF justice holds a comparable stake in a private commercial institution. The Instituto Brasiliense de Direito Público (IDP), which Mendes co-founded in 1998, functions simultaneously as a law school with approximately 1,500 students, a postgraduate institute, and a revenue-generating event and contract partner for government and private sector entities. In 2017, Mendes transferred formal management to his son Francisco ("Chico") Mendes - but remained a partner and stakeholder.
The CNJ - the very oversight body Mendes led as Chief Justice - ruled in 2008 that using judicial prestige to generate private profits is "inadequate" under Brazilian judicial ethics. Mendes has maintained the IDP partnership regardless, across five subsequent STF presidents and multiple ethics investigations.
The CBF ContractIn August 2023, IDP - signed by Chico Mendes - entered a 10-year contract with the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) to manage the CBF Academy, generating roughly R$9.2 million annually, with IDP retaining 84%. Five months later, on January 4, 2024, Gilmar Mendes issued an injunction reinstating CBF president Ednaldo Rodrigues - who had been temporarily removed by a Rio de Janeiro state court - without recusing himself despite the active financial relationship between his family institution and the federation. Brazilian legal experts called the arrangement "unconstitutional" in May 2025. The STF then voted 7-to-1 against Mendes in multiple related rulings, a margin that signals meaningful internal court disagreement about the propriety of his position.
JBS and the Corruption ConnectionBetween 2008 and 2016, JBS - controlled by the Batista family, who were later convicted in a corruption scandal - paid R$7.5 million to IDP for seminar sponsorships and events. Mendes presided over cases involving JBS-related entities throughout this period. No criminal finding has been made against Mendes in connection with these payments, but the pattern - a sitting justice's private institute receiving major funding from litigants appearing before the court - has become the textbook example of structural conflict-of-interest risk within the STF.
The Banco Master Scandal: Congressional Impeachment and the Limits of AccountabilityThe episode that transformed ethics allegations into a formal constitutional crisis began with the collapse of Banco Master in late 2025. The Central Bank ordered the bank's extrajudicial liquidation in November 2025 following the arrest of its owner Daniel Vorcaro while attempting to leave Brazil. The scandal involves approximately R$12.2 billion in allegedly fraudulent credit portfolios sold to Banco de Brasília (BRB), a state bank, and has been described as potentially the largest financial scandal in recent Brazilian history. By April 2026, BRB estimated it needed R$8.8 billion in provisions and had not yet published its Q4 2025 results.
The congressional CPI do Crime Organizado - originally created to investigate narcotrafficking - pivoted to Banco Master when resistance blocked a dedicated commission. In its 221-page final report filed April 14, 2026, rapporteur Senator Alessandro Vieira recommended impeachment proceedings against Mendes, along with Justices Dias Toffoli and Alexandre de Moraes, and Prosecutor-General Paulo Gonet. The charge against Mendes centers on two specific acts:
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Annulling the CPI's own subpoenas for bank and tax records targeting Justice Toffoli's resort company (Maridt Participações) and the Fundo Arleen - controlled by Fabiano Zettel, brother-in-law of Vorcaro and identified by Federal Police as a central financial operator in the Banco Master criminal network.
Accepting a flight on a private aircraft linked to Marcos Molina, who paid R$16.7 million to Vorcaro-connected entities in early 2025. Mendes says he accepted without knowledge of the aircraft's connections to Vorcaro.
This is the first time in Brazilian history that a congressional investigation has sought the formal indictment of sitting STF members - a structural landmark regardless of how the proceedings ultimately resolve.
Why Removal Remains UnlikelyThe CPI report carries no binding legal force. Referrals flow to the Procuradoria-Geral da República - led by Paulo Gonet, one of the four targets himself. Senate President Davi Alcolumbre has refused to extend the CPI's mandate, signaled he will not install a dedicated Banco Master CPI, and has historically shelved over 100 impeachment petitions against STF justices without advancement. A full Senate conviction requires 54 votes (two-thirds of 81 senators), and Lula's congressional allies provide a reliable firewall. Prediction markets assign very low probability to any STF removal before 2027. Brazil has never successfully impeached and removed a sitting Supreme Court justice.
Inside the STF: Court Composition and the "Ministrocracia" ProblemUnderstanding Mendes requires understanding the institution he inhabits. The STF's 11 justices are appointed for life terms - until mandatory retirement at 75 - by the sitting president, subject to a simple Senate majority. There are no supermajority requirements, no fixed terms, and no binding ideological tests. As SCOTUSblog noted in April 2026, the appointing president does not reliably explain voting patterns: Toffoli (a Lula I appointee) has sided with the Bolsonaro camp at times; Moraes (a Temer appointee) has been the court's most aggressive opponent of Bolsonarism.
| Justice | Appointed By | Year | Retires | Ideological Lean |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gilmar Mendes (Decano) | Cardoso (PSDB) | 2002 | 2030 | Centrist / market liberal |
| Cármen Lúcia | Lula I (PT) | 2006 | 2029 | Center-progressive |
| Dias Toffoli | Lula I (PT) | 2009 | 2042 | Centrist (volatile) |
| Luiz Fux | Rousseff (PT) | 2011 | 2028 | Conservative / market liberal |
| Edson Fachin (President) | Rousseff (PT) | 2015 | 2033 | Progressive |
| Alexandre de Moraes | Temer (MDB) | 2017 | 2043 | Centrist (anti-Bolsonaro) |
| Kássio Nunes Marques | Bolsonaro (PL) | 2020 | 2047 | Conservative |
| André Mendonça | Bolsonaro (PL) | 2021 | 2047 | Conservative |
| Cristiano Zanin | Lula III (PT) | 2023 | 2050 | Center-left |
| Flávio Dino | Lula III (PT) | 2024 | 2043 | Progressive |
| (Vacant - Messias nom. pending) | Lula III (PT) | - | - | - |
Brazilian constitutional scholars Diego Werneck Arguelhes and Leandro Molhano Ribeiro coined the term ministrocracia to describe an STF in which individual justices exercise quasi-autonomous powers rather than acting as a collegial body. The numbers are striking: approximately 90% of STF decisions are made by individual justices, not the plenary. Rapporteurs can hold cases for five to fifteen years without triggering a collegial vote. Individual injunctions carry national effect. The Verfassungsblog's April 2026 analysis calls the current moment the most severe institutional crisis in the STF's democratic history, drawing a direct parallel to India's 2018 Supreme Court crisis.
Mendes's December 2025 solo ruling on impeachment standing is a textbook example of the problem: a single justice, exercising monocrática authority, attempting to alter a decades-old norm that directly benefits himself and his colleagues. The partial reversal that followed did not eliminate the underlying structural reality - it merely reflected the political limits of what one justice could sustain unilaterally against bipartisan opposition.
Public Trust, the 2026 Election, and What Comes NextThe STF's crisis is not merely legal - it is deeply political in a general election year. A Datafolha poll from July 2025 found 36% of Brazilians rate the STF's performance as "bad," 67% believe justices prioritize their own interests over the public's, and - by early 2026 - 66% say it is important to vote for Senate candidates committed to pursuing STF impeachments. The court that blocked Bolsonaro's attempted coup now finds itself deeply unpopular with segments of the electorate that supported that intervention.
STF President Edson Fachin launched a court ethics code initiative in March 2026, designating Cármen Lúcia to lead the process. The São Paulo Bar Association submitted a civil-society-backed draft proposing recusal for relatives up to the third degree, mandatory schedule disclosure, and a three-year post-retirement cooling-off period. Toffoli and Moraes opposed the code in plenary. The institutional lunch Fachin called to advance the discussion was cancelled amid silence from other justices. The ethics code has not advanced as of April 2026.
For investors and analysts, the practical implications are concrete. The STF retains jurisdiction over more than 600 authorities and issues nationally binding decisions affecting tax policy, labor law, financial regulation, and press freedom. A court operating under the ministrocracia dynamic - where any single justice can halt a CPI subpoena, reinstate a football association president, or suspend a legislative vote by solo order - introduces idiosyncratic legal risk into every major commercial and regulatory decision that touches Brazilian institutions. Ideological coalitions on the court shift case by case, and individual justices' undisclosed business relationships can - as the CBF case demonstrated - create unannounced conflicts that produce 7-to-1 internal defeats for the conflicted justice.
Gilmar Mendes will remain on the bench until 2030. The next four years will determine whether the institutional reform pressure building in the Senate, civil society, and the bar produces structural change - or whether the STF's internal inertia and political protection hold. Either outcome will define the operating environment for Brazilian legal and regulatory risk for the rest of the decade.
Related Coverage on Rio Times Online-
Gilmar Mendes, PGR Vieira, and the CPI: Abuse of Authority in Brazil
CPI Organized Crime Report: STF Impeachment and Banco Master
STF Threatens Senators as CPI Moves Forward; Gonet Refuses to Investigate
Brazil's Top Court Blocks Senate Probe Into Its Own Member
When the Bench Becomes a Family Business: Inside Brazil's Supreme Court Ethics Crisis
Banco Master Is Cracking Open Brazil's Power Alliances
This article is part of The Rio Times' guide series, offering in-depth analysis for investors, expats, and analysts tracking Latin America. This article does not constitute investment advice.
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