Mendonça Delivers a Bold Strike Against Government Protection Racket in Major Corruption Probe

By Hotspotnews

 

In a stunning move that has sent shockwaves through Brazil’s political establishment, Supreme Federal Court (STF) Minister André Mendonça has once again demonstrated the independence that conservatives have long demanded from the judiciary. On June 18, 2026, Mendonça authorized a new phase of Operation Compliance Zero, targeting none other than Senator Jaques Wagner — a powerful PT heavyweight, government leader in the Senate, and close ally of President Lula.

What makes this development particularly explosive is how it unfolded. Federal Police Director-General Andrei Rodrigues, who was traveling with Lula at the G7 summit in France, was completely blindsided. He only learned of the raids and searches after they were already underway. This was no accident. Mendonça, acting as the case’s lead rapporteur, enforced strict compartmentalization protocols — known in legal circles as “blindagem” — that deliberately kept the PF’s top brass in the dark to prevent leaks and political interference.

For months, tensions have simmered between the judiciary and the Federal Police leadership over the Banco Master financial fraud investigation. Mendonça’s decision to limit information flow to only the hands-on investigators is a clear signal: the probe will not be derailed or softened to protect powerful figures in the current administration. This is the same operation that has already exposed serious irregularities in banking and compliance schemes with alleged ties to influential political circles.

Conservatives have every reason to applaud this development. André Mendonça, appointed to the STF by former President Jair Bolsonaro, continues to prove himself as one of the few voices on the Court willing to prioritize institutional integrity over political loyalty. While much of the STF has been criticized for activism that often seems to shield the left, Mendonça’s handling of this case reflects a commitment to letting investigations proceed without favoritism — even when it embarrasses the government.

The reaction from PT-aligned voices has been predictable: outrage masked as concern for “institutional harmony.” Yet the facts speak louder. A sitting senator from the ruling party is under scrutiny in a major fraud probe, and the Federal Police’s director — appointed under the current administration — was cut out of the loop precisely to maintain the operation’s integrity. This is what real accountability looks like, and it stands in stark contrast to the protection networks that many Brazilians believe have flourished under Lula’s return to power.

Critics on the left will no doubt paint this as an attack on democracy or an institutional crisis. In reality, it is a necessary correction. For too long, high-level corruption cases in Brazil have been diluted through selective leaks, friendly appointments, and backroom deals. Mendonça’s firm stance disrupts that pattern.

As Compliance Zero advances, Brazilians deserve full transparency. If Jaques Wagner and others in the PT orbit have legitimate explanations, let the evidence decide. But shielding allies from scrutiny has never served the nation — only the insiders. Minister Mendonça’s surprise move today reminds everyone that no one, regardless of title or party affiliation, should be above the law.

The coming weeks will reveal whether this represents a broader shift toward genuine judicial independence or remains an isolated act of courage. For now, it stands as a refreshing example of what happens when a judge puts Brazil first.

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