Brazil’s Judiciary Unbound: Ongoing Human Rights Concerns and the Fragility of International Agreements

By Hotspotnews

In recent years, Brazil’s Supreme Federal Court (STF) has faced intense scrutiny for actions perceived by critics as overreaching judicial authority, particularly in cases related to the events following the 2022 presidential election and the January 8, 2023, invasions of government buildings. On December 16, 2025, the court’s First Panel resumed the trial of six defendants accused of participating in an alleged coup plot, known as “Nucleus 2.” Minister Alexandre de Moraes, the reporting judge, voted to convict five of them—including former presidential advisor Filipe Martins—on serious charges such as attempting to violently abolish the democratic rule of law, coup d’état, armed criminal organization, and damage to public property. One defendant, a federal police delegate, was acquitted due to insufficient evidence.

Critics argue that this conviction exemplifies a pattern of unchecked power within the judiciary. Moraes acknowledged controversies in key evidence, such as disputed records of Martins’ travel to the United States, which were initially used to justify preventive detention on grounds of flight risk. He admitted potential irregularities but maintained that they did not invalidate the core case. Testimonies from military commanders, presented as prosecution witnesses, stated that Martins did not participate in alleged coup-planning meetings—yet these were reportedly downplayed. Reliance on a single plea bargain, amid inconsistencies like mismatched timelines in travel records, has fueled accusations of fragile proof being elevated to justify severe outcomes.

For many observers, including legal experts and political opponents, these proceedings raise profound questions about due process, presumption of innocence, and judicial impartiality. When a single minister serves as investigator, prosecutor, victim in related inquiries, and final judge, it concentrates authority in ways that strain democratic checks and balances. Prolonged preventive measures—such as electronic monitoring, curfews, and social media bans—applied to defendants like Martins have been criticized as disproportionate, effectively punishing individuals before conviction.

This domestic judicial assertiveness intersected with international diplomacy in 2025. Earlier in the year, the United States imposed significant tariffs on Brazilian exports and sanctions under human rights laws, citing concerns over censorship, arbitrary detentions, and politicized prosecutions. These measures targeted judicial figures involved in high-profile cases, framing them as violations of free expression and fair trial standards. Negotiations between the Brazilian and U.S. governments led to partial rollbacks: tariffs were eased on key sectors like agriculture, and sanctions were lifted in December 2025.

Yet, the timing of the Nucleus 2 convictions—mere days after these diplomatic concessions—has sparked debate. Critics contend it signals a disregard for the spirit of international understandings aimed at addressing human rights concerns. If external pressure highlighted perceived abuses, the continuation of similar judicial practices without restraint suggests that agreements may secure economic relief but fail to curb domestic overreach. This perceived impunity risks eroding public trust in institutions and fueling polarization.

Brazil’s democracy has weathered significant challenges since 2022, but the absence of clear limits on judicial power in politically charged cases continues to alarm those who fear selective application of the law. Without broader reforms to ensure impartiality and proportionality, accusations of rights violations—arbitrary detentions, suppressed speech, and convictions on contested evidence—persist. The recent diplomatic thaw offered hope for de-escalation, but ongoing trials underscore a deeper issue: power without sufficient accountability can undermine the very democratic order it claims to protect. As Brazil navigates these tensions, the world watches whether internal safeguards will emerge to restore balance and confidence in the rule of law.

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