The Dismantling of Lava Jato: The Greatest Victory for Impunity in Brazil
By Hotspotnews
In December 2025, Brazil witnessed a scene that would be unthinkable in any nation seriously committed to fighting corruption: a former Petrobras executive, convicted of receiving millions in bribes from Odebrecht and UTC, had R$ 26.5 million unblocked in Switzerland and repatriated to his own accounts. Not to the victims of corruption—the Brazilian people, who footed the billion-dollar bill for the looting of state companies—but to the confessed corrupt individual himself.
This episode is not an isolated case. It is the culmination of a systematic dismantling of Operation Lava Jato, the largest anti-corruption investigation in the country’s history, which recovered billions for public coffers, exposed endemic corruption during the Workers’ Party governments, and convicted dozens of powerful figures who once considered themselves untouchable.
It all began with single-handed decisions by the Supreme Federal Court, particularly from Justice Dias Toffoli, who in 2023 annulled the Odebrecht leniency agreement—the backbone of Lava Jato’s evidence—citing procedural irregularities in obtaining the Drousys and MyWebDay systems. From there, a domino effect: evidence invalidated, convictions overturned, assets unblocked, statutes of limitations applied. The practical result? Dirty money returning to the hands of those who stole it.
It is no exaggeration to say that the biggest beneficiary of this dismantling was Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. His convictions across three court instances were annulled not due to lack of crime, but alleged formal flaws—such as the jurisdiction of the Curitiba court and the supposed bias of then-judge Sergio Moro. With that, Lula regained his political rights, returned to the Presidency, and now leads a country where corruption is once again treated as normal, almost folkloric.
Meanwhile, Transparency International has described the case of returning millions to the former Petrobras executive as “unprecedented in the world”: assets seized in corruption investigations being handed back to the corrupt themselves, rather than to the victims. The organization warns that Brazil is violating OECD international treaties and turning into a “graveyard for corruption evidence,” driving away investment and destroying trust in institutions.
Defenders of the Supreme Court’s decisions repeat the mantra of “due process” and the “excesses of Lava Jato.” But due process cannot serve as a shield for widespread impunity. When formal rigor is selectively used to free the powerful—especially those from a particular political spectrum—it becomes a mere tool of power, not justice.
Lava Jato was not perfect. There were mistakes, overreaches, perhaps even abuses. But it represented a rare moment when Brazil said “enough” to the systemic corruption that drained the people’s resources to enrich politicians, contractors, and bureaucrats. Dismantling it piece by piece, under the pretext of correcting procedural flaws, is handing the country back to the old practices that kept it in moral and economic stagnation for decades.
Today’s Brazil has its worst historical score on the Corruption Perceptions Index. Billions that could have gone to health, education, and infrastructure are returning to the pockets of convicted individuals. And the message is clear: here, crime pays—as long as you have the right friends in the right places.
Impunity is not just a defeat for justice. It is a betrayal of the Brazilian people, who pay the highest price: a poorer, more unequal, and morally degraded country. While bribe money flows back to the corrupt, Brazil remains enslaved by the old system that Lava Jato, for one brief moment, dared to challenge.

