Bolsonaro Family Hits Back Against Media Smear Campaign Over Texas Film Fund: No Personal Ties, Pure Political Persecution
By Hotspotnews
In yet another chapter of the Brazilian mainstream media’s relentless war on the Bolsonaro family, outlets like Folha de S.Paulo and O Globo have attempted to manufacture scandal from routine business structures tied to a legitimate film project. Eduardo Bolsonaro, living in self-imposed exile in the United States due to political persecution under the current regime, has firmly denied any personal involvement in a Texas property purchase or misuse of funds. The facts, as always when scrutinized beyond the headlines, reveal nothing more than standard U.S. financial tools, a private investment in a pro-Bolsonaro biopic, and desperate attempts by the left to distract from their own failures.
The Setup: A Biopic and Private Funding
The story revolves around Dark Horse, an upcoming biographical film about former President Jair Bolsonaro, directed by Cyrus Nowrasteh and starring Jim Caviezel. Senator Flávio Bolsonaro confirmed that private sponsorship was sought for this independent production, including contributions routed through legitimate channels. Banker Daniel Vorcaro, facing his own legal issues with Banco Master, committed resources—approximately $10.6 million transferred out of a larger negotiated amount—to support the project via the Havengate Development Fund LP, a Texas-registered investment vehicle.
Flávio has been clear: Every dollar placed in the fund was dedicated to film production, not personal enrichment. This is private enterprise at work—conservatives raising capital for cultural content that celebrates leadership, patriotism, and Brazil’s recent successes under Bolsonaro, countering years of leftist dominance in media and entertainment.
How the Funds Work: Standard U.S. Structures, Zero Direct Bolsonaro Ownership
Critics hype “connections” without evidence of wrongdoing. Here’s the straightforward explanation:
- Havengate Development Fund LP: This is a Texas limited partnership designed for development investments, including entertainment projects. It acts as a vehicle to pool and deploy capital efficiently under U.S. regulations. Funds flow from Brazilian entities (like Entre Investimentos e Participações) to this U.S. structure for legitimate cross-border production needs—common in international filmmaking to handle currency, taxes, and compliance.
- Mercury Legacy Trust: A separate private trust used for asset management in the U.S., often to hold property anonymously for privacy and estate planning (standard practice for high-net-worth individuals and businesses). It purchased a home in Arlington, Texas, for around $753,500–$3.6 million reais equivalent. Documents explicitly show no formal corporate ties between Mercury Legacy Trust, Havengate, or Eduardo Bolsonaro personally. The trust is administered by associates like attorney Paulo Calixto (who has handled Eduardo’s U.S. immigration matters) and allies such as André Porciuncula, but trusts like this are fiduciary tools—they manage assets for beneficiaries without implying personal ownership by every connected party.
Eduardo rents his residence outside Arlington and has stated plainly he has no link to the purchased property. U.S. trust law separates the trustee/administrator from beneficiaries or personal use. No deeds, tax records, or transfers tie the home directly to Eduardo or misuse of film funds. Brazilian media’s own reporting admits “documents obtained do not show formal corporate ties,” yet they run inflammatory headlines anyway. This is classic fake news: Accuse first, nuance (or retract) later.
These structures are not shadowy schemes—they are how global finance operates. Hollywood films routinely use Delaware or Texas entities for funding. Conservative projects deserve the same access to capital without leftist inquisitions.
Why the Smear? Political Persecution, Not Principle
This narrative emerges amid Federal Police probes and as Brazil approaches elections. The left, unable to defeat Bolsonaro ideas at the ballot box, weaponizes institutions and compliant media to harass his family. Eduardo, one of Brazil’s most-voted politicians in history, faces exile while leftist figures enjoy impunity for far graver scandals.
Vorcaro’s troubles with Banco Master are his own; routing private sponsorship through professional U.S. funds insulates the project and complies with regulations. Claims of “diversion” for Eduardo’s living expenses ignore Flávio’s public confirmation that funds stayed with production. Supporters rightly see this as lawfare—selective enforcement to sideline conservatives.
The Bolsonaro family continues fighting for a sovereign, prosperous Brazil: lower taxes, security, traditional values, and cultural pushback. A film celebrating Jair Bolsonaro’s legacy as a defender of freedom is exactly the kind of “dark horse” story that terrifies the establishment.
The next “scandal” will come, but patriots see through it. Truth prevails over manufactured outrage. Brazil—and the world—watches as conservatives build, while the left tears down.


