Is Alexandre de Moraes a Judge or a King? Brazil’s Supreme Court Scandal Exposes a System Built on Impunity
In any healthy democracy, the rule of law demands that judges be held to the highest standards of integrity and impartiality. Yet in Brazil, one man—Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes—appears to operate above it all. While his wife’s law firm raked in roughly 80 million reais from a bank now at the center of one of the country’s largest fraud scandals, the institution charged with upholding justice has offered little more than stony silence. The Banco Master affair is not just a conflict-of-interest story. It is a glaring indictment of an imperial judiciary that protects its own while ordinary Brazilians suffer the consequences of eroded trust.
The facts are damning. Documents from Brazil’s tax authority, shared with the Senate’s parliamentary inquiry into organized crime, reveal that Banco Master paid the law firm Barci de Moraes Sociedade de Advogados—led by Viviane Barci de Moraes, the justice’s wife—approximately 80 million reais over 22 months, from February 2024 until the bank’s liquidation by the Central Bank in November 2025. That figure stems from a larger contract reportedly valued at up to 129 million reais, with monthly payments averaging 3.6 million reais. To put this in perspective, these are not routine legal fees for standard courtroom work. The bank was already under scrutiny for alleged fraud, money laundering, and ties to suspicious financial operations. Yet the payments flowed steadily while the institution teetered on the edge of collapse.
When the story broke, the response from the Moraes family was telling. For months, there was virtual silence. Then, in March 2026, the wife’s firm finally issued a public note detailing its services: 94 meetings (79 of them in person at the bank’s headquarters), 36 legal opinions, and work involving a team of 15 lawyers on matters like compliance and public relations policy. The firm insists it never represented Banco Master before the Supreme Court itself. But even this belated explanation has been widely criticized as inadequate. Legal experts have pointed to glaring gaps: the exorbitant sums paid for what amounts to consulting work that many view as suspiciously generous, especially given the bank’s regulatory troubles and the justice’s own reported communications with its owner, Daniel Vorcaro. If the services were so routine and above board, why the delay in transparency? And why the extraordinary scale of compensation from a bank drowning in scandal?
Worse still is the Supreme Federal Court’s (STF) collective shrug. There has been no meaningful institutional response—no broad recusal from related cases, no internal ethics probe with teeth, and certainly no rush to reassure the public that justice remains blind. Instead, the Court has quietly relaxed its own conflict-of-interest rules in recent years, creating a permissive environment where family windfalls from powerful clients raise few eyebrows inside the marble halls of Brasília. Other justices have faced scrutiny in the same probe, yet the pattern persists: when the powerful are implicated, the system stalls. The Senate’s CPI has summoned witnesses and broken secrecy on some records, but it operates under the shadow of an STF that wields monocratic decisions like a scepter, often shielding itself from accountability.
This is the heart of the rot. Brazil’s Constitution grants Supreme Court justices lifetime tenure and near-impenetrable protections precisely to safeguard judicial independence. But independence was never meant to become impunity. When a justice’s household benefits handsomely from an institution under federal investigation, and the Court offers no robust mechanism to address the appearance of impropriety, public faith collapses. Polls already show nearly half of Brazilians distrust the STF, a crisis accelerated by this scandal. Conservatives have long warned that an activist judiciary—quick to silence dissent, block political opponents, and issue sweeping rulings on speech and elections—risks becoming an unaccountable oligarchy. The Banco Master case proves the point: the same court that lectures the nation on democracy refuses to police itself.
Is Alexandre de Moraes a judge or a king? The question is no longer rhetorical. Kings answer to no one; they rule by decree and surround themselves with courtiers who benefit from their favor. Judges, by contrast, submit to the law, recuse when compromised, and prioritize the public interest over personal or familial gain. The continued tolerance of this situation—payments unexplained to the satisfaction of reasonable observers, institutional silence in the face of outrage, and a judiciary too weak or unwilling to enforce basic ethical guardrails—suggests the former. Brazil’s democracy deserves better than a Supreme Court that looks more like a protected enclave than an impartial arbiter.
True conservatives understand that strong institutions require vigilance, not blind deference. Without genuine reform—stricter conflict rules, mandatory family disclosures, and real consequences for ethical lapses—the taint will only deepen. The Brazilian people are watching. They deserve judges who serve justice, not kings who serve themselves. The Banco Master scandal is not an isolated embarrassment. It is a symptom of a deeper institutional failure that demands urgent correction before trust in Brazil’s highest court evaporates entirely.

