Brazil: Federal Police and the evil monster they created

By Hotspotnews

The Federal Police in Brazil are finally tasting the bitter medicine they’ve helped force-feed the nation for years. For nearly seven long years, the PF turned a blind eye—or worse, actively enabled—the unchecked power grabs of Justice Alexandre de Moraes and his allies on the Supreme Federal Court. They executed sweeping search warrants, seized phones and computers, censored speech, and dismantled political opposition, all under the banner of defending “democracy” while conveniently ignoring the growing monster in their own house. Conservatives warned them repeatedly: when you empower unaccountable judicial activism, when you selectively enforce laws to protect one side and punish the other, that same machinery will eventually turn on you. Well, here we are.

The Banco Master scandal has exploded into the open, revealing a web of alleged multi-billion-real fraud involving fake credit creation, suspicious fund transfers, and connections that reach uncomfortably close to the heart of the STF itself. Reports detail how relatives of Justice Dias Toffoli held stakes in entities tied to the bank’s questionable operations, while the law office run by Justice Moraes’s wife held a massive contract—reportedly worth hundreds of millions—with the very institution now under criminal scrutiny. These are not fringe allegations; they come from mainstream outlets documenting contracts, partnerships, and financial trails that scream conflict of interest.

Yet instead of transparent, arms-length justice, what has unfolded is a textbook display of institutional self-preservation. The PF, attempting to do its job by pursuing evidence in Operation Compliance Zero, has watched as key decisions pull the rug out from under them. Proofs seized in raids were ordered held under lock and key at the STF itself, experts appointed at the discretion of those implicated, tight deadlines imposed then adjusted only after pressure, and now even the pace of interrogations micromanaged from the bench. The Police Federal’s request for assistance to challenge these moves was reportedly denied or stonewalled, leaving investigators frustrated and the public wondering just whose side the system is really on.u*

This is the “I told you so” moment conservatives have waited for with grim satisfaction. For years, the PF acted as the enforcement arm of a politicized judiciary, raiding homes of former officials, freezing assets without due process, and silencing dissent—all while the same court shielded its own from serious scrutiny. They tolerated—or participated in—the creation of an imperial judiciary that answered to no one. Now, when the spotlight swings toward potential misconduct involving family members of powerful ministers, the institutions that once cheered the overreach find themselves on the receiving end: blocked access to evidence, procedural roadblocks, and the unmistakable sense that the rules bend depending on who is under investigation.

The damage runs deeper than one scandal. Public trust in both the judiciary and federal law enforcement has eroded to near-collapse. Brazilians see a two-tiered system: one for ordinary citizens and political opponents, where the full weight of the state crashes down without mercy; another for the elite insiders, where investigations drag, proofs disappear into STF vaults, and accountability evaporates. When the guardians of order become complicit in selective justice, the entire rule of law suffers.

The PF may yet salvage some credibility if they push forward aggressively and transparently. But the lesson is unmistakable: Frankenstein’s monster has awakened, and it recognizes no former allies. Those who fed it power for political convenience now face its appetite themselves. Conservatives predicted this outcome—not out of spite, but because unchecked authority always corrupts, and absolute judicial power corrupts absolutely. The bill has come due.

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