Trump Administration Expels Politicized Brazilian Federal Police Agent: Exposing Lula’s Export of Political Persecution

By Hotspotnews

In a firm defense of American sovereignty, the Trump administration took decisive action in April 2026 by expelling Marcelo Ivo de Carvalho, a Brazilian Federal Police delegate serving as a liaison with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Miami. Carvalho was ordered out for allegedly attempting to manipulate the U.S. immigration system, bypassing proper extradition channels, and injecting Brazil’s domestic political battles onto American soil.

The incident centered on Alexandre Ramagem, a former intelligence chief, lawmaker, and staunch ally of President Jair Bolsonaro. Ramagem had sought refuge in the United States after Brazil’s Supreme Court handed him a lengthy prison sentence over alleged ties to a supposed “coup plot” following the January 8, 2023, events in Brasília. Many conservatives view these charges as part of a broader witch hunt by the Lula da Silva government and activist judges to silence opposition voices. When U.S. authorities briefly detained Ramagem, the Brazilian side’s involvement triggered alarm bells in Washington. The Trump team rightly drew a line: America’s borders and legal processes will not serve as tools for foreign regimes to pursue their political enemies.

This expulsion highlights a welcome return to prioritizing U.S. interests. No foreign agent should treat American institutions as extensions of their own country’s partisan vendettas. The message is clear—under President Trump, the United States refuses to be complicit in the erosion of due process abroad.

The Shameful Reality in Brazil

The deeper scandal lies in what this reveals about Brazil under Lula. What started as probes into protests has evolved into a systematic campaign against Bolsonaro supporters, military personnel, and conservative figures. The Federal Police, traditionally a respected force against corruption and crime, increasingly appears weaponized by the ruling coalition and the Supreme Court. Allegations surrounding Carvalho himself—including past involvement in a fatal drunk-driving incident and questions about his handling of sensitive cases—only fuel concerns about the integrity of those carrying out these operations.

Instead of addressing real threats like money laundering or violent crime by Brazilian networks in the U.S., Brazilian authorities focused on chasing political fugitives through back channels. When the United States pushed back, Brazil responded with petty retaliation by restricting a U.S. agent in Brasília. This tit-for-tat approach exposes a government more obsessed with consolidating power than fostering genuine international law enforcement cooperation.

A Stark Warning for the Free World

This episode should serve as a wake-up call. Judicial activism and selective prosecutions are undermining democracy in Brazil, creating refugees from political persecution who seek safety in freer nations. The pattern is familiar to conservatives worldwide: label opponents as threats to democracy, censor dissent, jail rivals, and then cry foul when other countries refuse to play along.

The true shame falls on those who have turned Brazil’s justice system into an instrument of revenge rather than impartial law. True justice demands neutrality, not retribution against political losers. By expelling Carvalho, the Trump administration has drawn a principled stand—America will remain a sanctuary for the persecuted, not a hunting ground for foreign regimes.

Freedom-loving Brazilians and Americans alike can take heart. Under strong leadership that values sovereignty, the United States continues to reject ideological overreach and politicized “justice.” Brazil’s leaders would be wise to abandon these exported vendettas and focus instead on genuine governance, economic recovery, and fighting actual crime at home. Sovereignty and the rule of law must prevail.

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