The Arrest of an American Citizen: Brazil’s Judicial Overreach Tests U.S. Resolve By Hotspotnews
In a move that reeks of political retribution, Brazilian authorities arrested 27-year-old U.S. citizen Celso Rodrigo de Mello on December 13, 2025, just one day after the Trump administration lifted sanctions on Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes. The timing alone raises serious questions about whether Brazil is honoring the spirit—if not the letter—of the recent diplomatic thaw between Washington and Brasília.
Mello, born in Florida and a lifelong American resident, was detained in Manaus on allegations that he helped former federal deputy Alexandre Ramagem flee to the United States. Ramagem, a close ally of former President Jair Bolsonaro, had been sentenced to 16 years in prison in proceedings widely criticized by conservatives as politically motivated “lawfare” orchestrated by Justice Moraes. Ramagem himself has publicly denied that Mello assisted his departure, stating the two only connected after he was already safely in America.
This is not some international fugitive with a long rap sheet. Mello was traveling with family, reportedly en route to the United States for his own wedding. His defense insists he had no involvement in Ramagem’s escape and points to a complete lack of direct evidence tying him to any crime. Yet he sits in preventive detention, ordered personally by the very justice whose sanctions were just removed by President Trump.
Conservatives in both Brazil and the United States have long warned that Justice Moraes has turned Brazil’s highest court into a tool for silencing political opposition. Censorship orders against social media platforms, arbitrary arrests of journalists and lawmakers, and indefinite detentions without trial have become hallmarks of his tenure. The arrest of an American citizen fits this disturbing pattern perfectly: send a message that no one, not even foreigners, is safe from retaliation if they are perceived as sympathetic to the wrong side.
The Trump administration’s decision to lift the Global Magnitsky sanctions was widely understood as a goodwill gesture aimed at de-escalating tensions and encouraging Brazil to restore democratic norms. Many hoped it would signal the beginning of the end for the relentless persecution of Bolsonaro supporters. Instead, Brazilian authorities responded by arresting a young American the very next day. If this is how Brasília repays American restraint, then the deal looks increasingly one-sided.
American citizens do not enjoy immunity abroad, but neither should they be pawns in foreign political vendettas. The United States has every right to demand full consular access, transparent proceedings, and basic due process for its nationals. More importantly, Washington should make clear that continued judicial overreach against Americans—or against democratic norms in general—will have consequences.
The Trump administration has shown it is unafraid to use American leverage to defend freedom around the world. Brazil’s leaders should take note: targeting an innocent American citizen to settle political scores is not the act of a reliable partner. It is the act of a regime more interested in power than justice.
If Brazil wants stronger ties with the United States—on trade, security, or any other front—it must demonstrate that its institutions respect the rule of law, not weaponize it. The case of Celso Rodrigo de Mello is now a litmus test. America is watching.


