The Scandal of Public Trust: How a Low-Paid Congressional Aide Moved Millions While Tied to INSS Fraud Scheme
By Hotspotnews
In a nation already weary of political scandals and misuse of taxpayer resources, a new revelation has emerged that strikes at the heart of accountability in government. Jerônimo Arlindo da Silva Júnior, better known as Júnior do Peixe, served as a parliamentary aide to Deputy Hugo Motta (Republicans-PB), who later became President of the Chamber of Deputies. During his time on the public payroll—earning roughly R$ 3,300 net per month—Júnior do Peixe moved an astonishing R$ 3.1 million through his bank accounts in just six months, between October 2020 and March 2021.
According to reports from financial intelligence authorities, he received approximately R$ 1.59 million from third parties and transferred out nearly R$ 1.57 million to other accounts during this period. Such volumes are impossible to reconcile with a modest aide’s salary. This is not the profile of honest public service; it is the red flag of potential money laundering, kickbacks, or other illicit flows—precisely the kind of activity that erodes faith in institutions.
Compounding the suspicion is Júnior do Peixe’s simultaneous or closely overlapping role as a director at Conafer, the Confederação Nacional dos Agricultores Familiares e Empreendedores Familiares Rurais. This entity stands at the center of one of the largest social security fraud scandals in recent Brazilian history, commonly called the “Farra do INSS.” Conafer allegedly collected nearly R$ 800 million between 2022 and 2025 through unauthorized deductions from retirees’ and pensioners’ benefits—deductions many vulnerable elderly Brazilians never approved or even knew about. Investigations point to much of this money flowing to shell companies, with federal police describing sophisticated schemes involving political, command, and financial nuclei designed to siphon public funds.
The presence of a congressional aide—hired through the apparatus of representative democracy—moving massive unexplained sums while linked to an organization profiting from pensioner exploitation raises grave questions. Why was someone connected to such an entity given a position in a high-level congressional office? Does this reflect poor vetting, willful blindness, or worse? Conservative principles demand transparency, fiscal responsibility, and protection of the most vulnerable—precisely the retirees who built this country through decades of hard work only to see their modest benefits raided.
This case is emblematic of a broader problem in Brazilian politics: the abuse of privileged positions for personal or illicit gain, often at the expense of ordinary citizens. When aides on modest salaries handle millions in unexplained transactions, and when entities tied to such figures prey on pensioners, it is not mere administrative oversight—it is a betrayal of public trust. Conservatives have long argued for smaller, cleaner government, stricter oversight of public spending, and severe consequences for corruption. The Júnior do Peixe affair underscores why those values matter.
The Brazilian people deserve answers. How could such glaring financial discrepancies go unnoticed or unaddressed for so long? What oversight failed to prevent—or perhaps facilitated—this convergence of congressional employment and involvement in a massive fraud scheme? Until full accountability is enforced, including thorough investigations and appropriate punishments, scandals like this will continue to fuel cynicism and distrust in democratic institutions.
It is time to restore integrity: protect retirees from predatory deductions, demand real transparency in public hiring and finances, and hold accountable anyone who uses the levers of power for private enrichment. Only then can we rebuild the trust that a healthy republic requires.

