In response to Dino: Trash is the STF Reputation
By Hotspotnews
The recent closed-door meeting of the Supreme Federal Court ministers has laid bare what many Brazilians have long suspected: the STF operates more like a private club protecting its own than as the guardian of justice and the Constitution.
In the midst of the massive Banco Master scandal—a collapse that left a staggering multi-billion reais hole in the deposit guarantee system and raised serious questions about conflicts of interest involving Minister Dias Toffoli—leaked accounts from the session reveal a shocking display of institutional arrogance and corporatism.
Minister Flávio Dino, instead of engaging seriously with a detailed 200-page Federal Police report that pointed to potential connections warranting scrutiny of Toffoli’s role as rapporteur, dismissed the entire document outright as “lixo jurídico”—legal trash. He declared the matter purely political, not legal, and insisted that only extreme crimes like pedophilia or rape should ever lead to a minister’s recusal. To drive the point home, Dino proclaimed his loyalty with the phrase “Eu sou STF Futebol Clube”—I am STF Football Club—signaling unwavering allegiance to the institution above any external accountability or evidence.
This is not mere rhetoric; it is a direct insult to the Federal Police, the institution tasked with investigating high-level corruption and financial crimes. Calling painstaking investigative work “trash” before any debate or judicial analysis strips away the pretense of impartiality. It reveals a mindset where inconvenient facts are discarded not because they lack merit, but because they threaten the comfort of those in power.
The outcome was predictable: a contrived collective note of support for Toffoli, his voluntary withdrawal from the case (in exchange for that shield of unanimity), and the reassignment to another minister. No real examination of the merits. No transparency. Just damage control among colleagues.
This episode is symptomatic of a deeper rot. When ministers treat a major fraud investigation involving billions in public-backed funds as a nuisance to be managed internally, when they prioritize club loyalty over institutional integrity, and when they publicly demean the work of law enforcement, the STF’s reputation sinks further into the gutter.
The Brazilian people deserve a Supreme Court that upholds the law without favoritism, that respects the separation of powers, and that does not circle the wagons when one of its own faces legitimate questions. Instead, we witness a tribunal that appears more concerned with self-preservation than with justice.
The trash here is not the Police report. The real garbage is the growing perception—now tragically reinforced—that the STF has become an untouchable elite club where accountability ends at its own doors. Until this changes, public trust in the highest court will remain in ruins.

