Brazil opens trials over pro-Bolsonaro riots
AFP :
Brazil’s Supreme Court on Wednesday opened its first trials over the January 8 riots by supporters of far-right ex-president Jair Bolsonaro, putting four accused in the dock in one of the buildings invaded that day.
The court’s 11 justices will deliver their decisions one by one in each case, with a majority needed to secure a conviction.
The lead judge on the case, Alexandre de Moraes, has already ruled to convict the first accused-a 51-year-old man named Aecio Pereira-recommending he be sentenced to 17 years in prison for his actions, which included invading the floor of the Senate in a T-shirt marked “Military Intervention.”
A second judge asked for a much lighter sentence of just 2.5 years, with the trial scheduled to resume on Thursday and nine justices still left to weigh in.
Moraes said the rioters, who also ransacked the presidential palace and Congress, carried out a “criminal invasion aimed at illegally seizing power via a military coup and violently overthrowing (the) democratically elected government” of President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.
The Brasilia riots deeply shook a nation still divided by veteran leftist Lula’s narrow win over Bolsonaro in the October 2022 presidential race, and drew inevitable comparisons to the invasion of the US Capitol on January 6, 2021 by supporters of then-president Donald Trump, Bolsonaro’s political role model.
Outraged over Bolsonaro’s loss to Lula, thousands of his supporters overwhelmed security to storm the seat of power a week after Lula’s inauguration, calling for a military intervention to oust the newly installed president, who was not in Brasilia at the time.
They ran riot inside the three buildings, smashing windows, throwing furniture into fountains, vandalizing artwork and turning the Senate’s central dais into a slide.
The four men on trial, aged between 24 and 52, are accused of crimes including armed criminal conspiracy, violent uprising against the rule of law and an attempted coup.
The Supreme Court plans to hear a total of 232 cases involving the most serious alleged crimes committed during the riots.
