The Two-Speed Justice System: Lightning for Enemies, Snail Pace for Friends
By Hotspotnews
Oh, what a delightful spectacle we’re witnessing in Brazil’s hallowed halls of justice. The Procuradoria-Geral da República, that paragon of impartiality under the esteemed Paulo Gonet, suddenly discovers the virtues of thoroughness and deliberation. When it comes to the glittering Caso Master—home to billionaire frauds, shadowy money laundering, and whispers of cozy ties that make even the most jaded observer raise an eyebrow—the PGR needs *more time*. Pages upon pages of evidence, you see, cannot be rushed. Precision is paramount. No hasty decisions here, thank you very much.
But wait—haven’t we seen this movie before? When the targets wear a different political jersey, the same institution somehow manages warp-speed reviews of terabytes upon terabytes of data. No complaints about insufficient hours then. No hand-wringing over “empty formalities.” Just swift indictments, rapid arrests, and the full weight of the state crashing down without a moment’s pause for reflection. Funny how urgency appears only when the accused happens to be on the wrong side of the current power alignment.
Enter Minister André Mendonça, who—bless his conservative soul—had the audacity to call the PGR’s foot-dragging “lamentable.” With a “robust quadro fático-probatório” staring everyone in the face (that’s lawyer-speak for “overwhelming pile of damning evidence”), he went ahead and authorized the arrests anyway, including that of banker Daniel Vorcaro. Because apparently, when society faces concrete risks from fraud schemes, intimidation networks, and alleged organized-crime connections, waiting politely for the bureaucracy to finish its coffee isn’t an option. Who knew?
And let’s not forget the broader context. This is the same judicial apparatus that moves mountains to prosecute certain figures while treating potential conflicts of interest elsewhere with all the urgency of a Sunday afternoon nap. Massive contracts funneled to well-connected law firms? Alleged links between financial empires and powerful networks? Crickets from the speed-demons who once claimed 70TB of data was no problem to digest overnight.
The Brazilian people aren’t asking for miracles. They just want consistency. If justice can sprint when it suits one agenda, why does it suddenly need orthopedic shoes when the spotlight shifts? The PGR’s newfound love for due process is touching—really, it is—but perhaps save the lectures on not treating analysis as a “formalidade vazia” for the cases where the system actually drags its feet.
Until then, color us unimpressed. Selective speed isn’t justice; it’s politics wearing a robe. And the robe is looking increasingly threadbare.


