Brazil’s Two-Tiered Justice: Hacker Who Targeted Supreme Court Gets Red Carpet to Freedom

By Hotspotnews

In a move that defies logic, common sense, and any semblance of equal justice, Brazil’s Procuradoria-Geral da República (PGR) has formally recommended that Walter Delgatti — the infamous hacker known as “Vaza Jato” — be granted open regime privileges. This is the same Delgatti who brazenly invaded the National Council of Justice (CNJ) systems, forged official documents, and even manufactured a fake arrest warrant against Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes himself.

Let that sink in. A man who weaponized cyber intrusion against the very institutions tasked with upholding the law is now being fast-tracked toward freedom after serving a fraction of his sentence. Convicted and sentenced to over eight years for these serious crimes, Delgatti has already enjoyed progression to semi-open regime earlier this year. Now, the PGR argues he has met the “minimum time” requirement and shown “good behavior.” In Brazil’s upside-down legal system, apparently hacking the judiciary and attempting to subvert a sitting minister earns you early release credits.

This isn’t justice — it’s a scandalous display of selective leniency. While ordinary Brazilians rot in overcrowded prisons for far lesser offenses, and while participants in the January 8, 2023, protests — many of whom committed no violence — continue to face harsh, prolonged detentions under Moraes’ iron-fisted oversight, a high-profile hacker with direct ties to undermining judicial integrity gets the benefit of the doubt. The message is crystal clear: in contemporary Brazil, the severity of punishment depends not on the crime, but on whose political interests are served.

Delgatti’s actions weren’t mere youthful mischief. They involved falsifying court orders and breaching sensitive government systems at a time of heightened political tension. Such breaches erode public trust in institutions far more than street protests ever could. Yet here we are, with prosecutors effectively advocating for his comfortable transition back to society. Where is the outrage from those who endlessly lecture about “defending democracy”? Apparently, democracy only needs defending when it aligns with their narrative.

This development exposes the deep rot in Brazil’s judicial apparatus. Progressive elements within the system seem all too eager to extend olive branches to those who challenge authority in ways that conveniently align with anti-conservative sentiments or past operations like Vaza Jato. Meanwhile, political opponents, journalists, and regular citizens expressing dissenting views face censorship, asset seizures, and indefinite restrictions. It’s not rule of law; it’s rule by whim.

Brazilians deserve better. True justice demands consistency, proportionality, and accountability — not this revolving door for connected criminals. If Delgatti walks free under open regime while others languish for lesser “crimes” against the establishment, it confirms what many have long suspected: the scales of Brazilian justice are not blind. They are politically calibrated. The absurdity unfolding in Brasília should alarm every citizen who values fairness over favoritism.

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version