The Apple Doesn’t Fall Far from the Tree: Selective Justice in the Banco Master Scandal
By Hotspotnews
In Brazil’s broken system, some families are simply above the law. While the left-wing establishment and their media allies scream about “democracy” and “institutions,” the facts around Banco Master expose the rotten core: a powerful STF minister’s family cashes in on massive fees from a bank mired in scandal, and somehow only the little guy (or the fall guy) takes the heat.
Let’s state the obvious reality the mainstream press downplays: Everyone made money with Banco Master. Daniel Vorcaro, the bank’s figurehead, sits arrested. Another key player is dead. Yet the rest — including those who pocketed tens of millions — stay dead silent, holding the cash and enjoying their privileges. And right in the middle sits the law firm of Viviane Barci de Moraes, wife of Minister Alexandre de Moraes, with their lawyer children deeply involved. That office pulled in roughly R$ 80 million in declared payments from the bank between 2024 and 2025 for “legal services” that conveniently included work before the Central Bank, Receita Federal, and National Congress.
The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. When a Supreme Court justice — notorious for his heavy-handed censorship, political persecutions, and “untouchable” aura — presides over a system where his own family’s firm feasts on fees from a bank now under organized crime scrutiny, ordinary Brazilians are right to smell something foul. The contract details are public via Receita Federal data sent to a Senate CPI. Dozens of meetings, legal opinions on compliance and regulation… all perfectly “normal,” according to the standard denials. But scale it up: R$40 million a year on average to one connected family office? In a country where most lawyers scrape by, this isn’t just good business — it’s access and influence at the highest levels.
Is this justice? Hardly. In a true rule of law, every participant would face equal scrutiny. Instead, Vorcaro is paraded as the villain while the Moraes family machine keeps humming. The payments were declared, the firm issued its notes downplaying conflicts and denying STF involvement, and life goes on for the connected elite. Meanwhile, small businessmen, conservative voices, and ordinary citizens get raided, censored, or financially crushed for far less.
This isn’t an isolated incident — it’s symptomatic of Brazil’s two-tiered “justice.” STF ministers lecture the nation on ethics while their relatives thrive in the gray zone where power meets profit. The apple doesn’t fall far because the tree is protected: shielded by robes, allies in the press, and a political class that only prosecutes its enemies.
Brazilians deserve better than this farce. Real justice would mean full transparency, asset reviews across the board for everyone tied to Banco Master, and an end to the myth of untouchable ministers. Until then, the message is clear: If you’re connected to the right family in Brasília, the rules don’t apply. The rest of us just pay the price.
IMAGEM BY Marcelo Araujo

