Brazilian parliamentary inquiry commission on organized crime requests indictment of Supreme Court Justices and the attorney general

Senators Fabiano Contarato, Alessandro Vieira and Flávio Bolsonaro at the Organized Crime CPI (Andressa Anholete/Agência Senado)

#CPI Crime Organizado

The final report of the Parliamentary Inquiry Commission on Organized Crime, signed by Senator Alessandro Vieira, presents an unprecedented proposal: the indictment of three Supreme Court justices – Alexandre de Moraes, Dias Toffoli, and Gilmar Mendes – and the Attorney General of the Republic, Paulo Gonet

The accusations relate to their actions in the context of the Banco Master scandal.

The document highlights, in particular, possible irregularities and conflicts of interest of the justices in the bank case.

In the report, the senator points out that Alexandre de Moraes’ wife, Viviane Barci, allegedly maintained a professional relationship with the institution that generated high remuneration – approximately R$ 129 million contracted and R$ 80 million paid.

According to the text, this would constitute an absolute impediment for the justice to act in cases related to the bank, as it would create a clear financial dependence between the family and the investigated company.

Regarding Dias Toffoli, the rapporteur highlights connections between the minister’s family business, called Maridt, and investment funds controlled by people linked to Banco Master.

Furthermore, he mentions a trip on a private jet taken by Toffoli with a lawyer defending one of the individuals under investigation in the case, which, according to the senator, compromises the appearance of impartiality required of the position.

The text states that Toffoli maintained business dealings without declaring any conflict of interest, which would violate professional decorum.

Gilmar Mendes is also cited in the indictment for acts related to the same scandal, although the report details the reasons against him less specifically.

Attorney General Paulo Gonet is accused of alleged omissions or inappropriate conduct within the scope of the investigations.

This is the first time a Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry (CPI) has proposed the indictment of Supreme Court justices.

The vote on the final report is scheduled to take place in the Senate today.

The document is part of the commission’s conclusions on organized crime and exposes, according to its authors, serious flaws and possible undue interference in the financial system and the Judiciary.

The story is still being updated, and the topic is expected to generate intense debate in the coming hours.#Y#


Published in 04/14/2026 13h30


Portuguese version


Text adapted by AI (Grok) and translated via Google API in the English version. Images from public image libraries or credits in the caption.


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