BRASILIA, Nov 8 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Brazil’s Supreme Court voted Thursday to overturn a ruling requiring convicted criminals to go to jail after losing
their first appeal, paving the way for leftist icon Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
to be freed.
The decision means thousands of convicts could be released from prison,
including Lula, who is among dozens of political and business leaders caught up in a sprawling corruption probe.
They would remain free until they had exhausted their rights to appeal
their conviction — a process critics say could take years in cases involving
people with deep pockets.
Lula’s lawyers said they would seek the “immediate release” of the former
president after speaking to him on Friday.
“Lula has not done anything wrong and is a victim of ‘lawfare,’ which in
the case of the ex-president is the strategic use of the law for the purpose
of political persecution,” his legal team said in a statement.
The 6-5 decision to overturn the three-year-old ruling is a major setback
for investigators in the so-called Car Wash probe, which is supported by many ordinary Brazilians fed up with corrupt leaders.
In a statement, the Car Wash task force said the ruling was “inconsistent”
with the fight against corruption.
While the court’s decision would impact their work, the investigators vowed to continue to “pursue justice.”
Courts will now need to review the cases of nearly 5,000 convicts.
The Supreme Court decision is unlikely to apply to inmates convicted of
violent crimes.
Lula, a popular leftist leader jailed in April 2018, is serving eight years
and 10 months for corruption.
He has been held at the federal police headquarters in the southern city of
Curitiba.
Lula, 74, was sentenced to almost 13 years in jail in February in a
separate corruption case and still faces another half dozen corruption
trials.
He has denied all the charges, arguing they were politically motivated to
keep him out of the 2018 presidential election that he was tipped to win.
If he is freed, Lula’s criminal record will prevent him from resuming his
political career.
That could change, however, if the Supreme Court were to decide in a
separate case that Justice Minister Sergio Moro, who convicted Lula when he was a judge in 2017, had been biased.
Moro, who joined Bolsonaro’s cabinet in January, has faced calls for his
resignation over leaked chats purportedly showing he worked with Car Wash prosecutors to keep Lula out of last year’s presidential race.
Moro has denied any wrongdoing and accused criminals of hacking the
messages with the aim of overturning convictions resulting from the
investigation, which began in 2014. — NNN-AGENCIES