In a nation where the elite have enjoyed relative impunity, a
new generation of police and prosecutors in Brazil are bent on using the
country's largest-ever corruption investigation to send the message that no one
is above the law.
They have displayed in a
local museum works of art seized in arrests in connection with alleged bribery
at state-run oil firm Petrobras. They have also paraded lobbyists and chief
executives in handcuffs before TV cameras.
And they gave the moniker
Operation 'Erga Omnes,' Latin for 'For everyone' to a raid that jailed one of
the country's most powerful corporate scions, CEO Marcelo Odebrecht.
Earlier this week they
publicized a hand-written note Odebrecht wrote from jail.
Reuters report continues:
Police said the arrests
have come as a "shock" to the wealthy and powerful suspects.
"These people
thought the police, and justice, would never reach them," Federal Police
agent Erika Marena told Reuters this week in her office in Curitiba, the
epicenter of the Petrobras investigation.
Marena said it has been
particularly surprising to see some detainees struggle with basic rituals like
shaving or laundry, presumably because they had "a group of people who
took care of everything for them."
"There are people
who do not know how to wash their own clothes, things that are basic for anyone
but not for someone who lived in this scale of luxury," she said.
Despair: Lula attacks Judge Sergio Moro through Wadih Damous
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While Marena doesn't name
names, Curitiba prisons now house more than a dozen lobbyists, political party
officials and construction executives. For the last week, they have included
Odebrecht, who runs Latin America's largest engineering conglomerate.
Odebrecht lawyers say the
arrest was illegal and the intercepted note was misinterpreted.
Marena is one of around
30 law enforcement agents helping a group of prosecutors - popularly known as "The
Untouchables" - mount a massive case that aims to stamp out impunity and
end what they call a "culture of corruption" in Brazil.
Knowing that the probe
has wide support among Brazilians, investigators openly share details of
arrests and have declared the press to be their ally.
The landmark probe
"is changing the idea of impunity" said Rodrigo Prando, a sociologist
at Mackenzie University in Sao Paulo.
"The United States
is used to celebrities being arrested; Brazil has never seen this," he
said.
Justice Celebrities
The wealth and status of
the executives contrast with the austere style of investigators who have spent
long hours in cramped offices in the 16 months since an investigation into
local currency changers led them to a massive kickback scheme.
They accuse engineering
executives of forming a cartel to fix prices and inflate the value of service
contracts with Petrobras to enrich themselves and politicians, nearly all from
or aligned with President Dilma Rousseff's Workers' Party.
Though they have become
celebrities with frequent television appearances in Brazil, the prosecutors
laugh when asked about fears for their safety. The federal judge overseeing the
case, Sergio Moro, even rides his bicycle to work on occasion.
While the court of public
opinion may be with the prosecutors, critics accuse them of overreaching with
some tactics, including the release of the Odebrecht note. They were dealt a
setback last month when Brazil's Supreme Court ordered the release into house
arrest of 10 executives who had been in pre-trial detention for five months.
Neither Rousseff nor her
predecessor Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva are being investigated and Rousseff says
she had no knowledge of the scheme when she presided over Petrobras' board from
2003 until 2010, when much of the alleged graft took place.
Still, a survey by
Datafolha in April showed 57 percent of Brazilians believe she knew about the
corruption and 63 percent supported opening impeachment proceedings. Her
approval rating has plummeted because of the investigation.
Meanwhile, at the federal
police headquarters and courthouse in Curitiba, Brazilians have adorned
colorful ribbons on the trees and fences in support of the investigation.
And while Judge Moro
tries to avoid the spotlight, he is greeted with cheers and flashing cameras
wherever he travels.
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