How a Bankrupt Brazilian Company Still Funds a Sanctioned Judge
In the strangest twist of 2025’s already chaotic political calendar, a Brazilian environmental-services giant that filed for bankruptcy protection less than a month ago with nearly two billion dollars in debt is proudly listed as a top-tier sponsor of the country’s most important gathering of public prosecutors. The 26th National Congress of the Public Ministry, held last week in Brasília, featured the usual parade of corporate logos (Coca-Cola, the national development bank BNDES, and others), but one name stood out like a red flag: Ambipar.
Ambipar’s financial implosion made headlines worldwide in October when auditors uncovered massive accounting irregularities and the company rushed into judicial recovery, the Brazilian equivalent of Chapter 11. Creditors are circling, employees fear layoffs, and shareholders have watched the stock price collapse. Yet somehow, the cash still flows freely enough to plaster its logo across an official event organized by the very institution that is supposed to police corporate misconduct.
Even more astonishing is the keynote speaker list. Front and center was Supreme Federal Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, the same judge placed under U.S. Treasury sanctions in July 2025 for what the American government described as a years-long campaign to silence conservative voices, shut down social-media platforms, and jail journalists and politicians without due process. The sanctions forbid any U.S. person or entity from doing business with him and freeze any assets he might hold under American jurisdiction.
So a federally sanctioned individual takes the stage at a taxpayer-supported event, and a freshly bankrupt company that owes billions gets pride-of-place billing as a “diamond sponsor.” If this were a Hollywood script, producers would reject it for being too on-the-nose.
Conservatives in Brazil and abroad have long warned that the country’s judicial and prosecutorial elite operate in a parallel universe, one where normal rules of accountability simply do not apply. This spectacle offered a near-perfect illustration. While ordinary Brazilians struggle with inflation and job insecurity, and while creditors of Ambipar wonder if they will ever see their money again, the institutional aristocracy carries on with glitzy conferences, five-star catering, and photo-ops that project strength and impunity.
The irony is almost painful: the Public Ministry, whose constitutional duty is to defend the legal order and fight corruption, hosts a man who much of the democratic world now treats as a pariah, and it does so with money from a corporation that appears to have cooked its own books. The message sent to the average citizen is unmistakable: the system protects its own, no matter how compromised the players or how empty the coffers.
Events like these do not happen by accident. Sponsorships at this level require six- and seven-figure commitments, signed months in advance. Someone at Ambipar decided, even while the company was circling the drain, that currying favor with Brazil’s most powerful prosecutors and judges was worth more than conserving cash for creditors or employees. Someone at the Public Ministry decided that accepting that money, and giving a sanctioned justice the spotlight, was perfectly compatible with its mission.
That is not how the rule of law is supposed to work. When bankruptcy courts, sanctions regimes, and public opinion all flash red warning lights, yet the machinery of elite power keeps humming along as if nothing happened, ordinary people rightly conclude that two sets of rules exist: one for the connected, and one for everyone else.
Last week in Brasília, the masks slipped just a little further. The sponsors’ backdrop, the applause for a sanctioned magistrate, and the silence from most of the Brazilian media combined to deliver a single, unmistakable message: in today’s Brazil, consequences are for the little people. The rest get to keep the stage, the spotlight, and the champagne.


