Enough is Enough: The Slow, Cruel Execution of José Fernando Honorato

By Hotspotnews

Yesterday marked another dark chapter in what can only be described as state-sponsored vengeance disguised as justice. José Fernando Honorato, a retired federal police officer who once led the Union of Federal Police Officers in the Federal District for nearly a decade, is dead. He succumbed to pancreatic cancer on November 19, 2025, at age 62 — after enduring nearly three years of relentless persecution that stripped him of dignity, health, and basic means of survival.

This wasn’t a natural death accelerated by illness alone. It was a slow suffocation engineered by a system that treats political opponents worse than common criminals.

Honorato entered the Supreme Federal Court building on January 8, 2023 — out of curiosity, following a PMDF convoy, filming the chaos and destruction. For that act — walking into a vandalized public building and posting videos — he was arrested, thrown into Papuda prison for almost ten months without trial, without interrogation, without conviction. No violent act. No weapon. No destruction personally caused. Just presence and documentation.

Then came the real torture:

– His federal police pension — nearly R$ 19,000 gross monthly — frozen to “guarantee” collective indemnities to public buildings.
– Reduced to surviving on minimum wage while battling aggressive pancreatic cancer.
– Chemotherapy sessions attended with an electronic ankle monitor chained to his leg, like a common fugitive.
– Mounting medical bills, family support obligations (three minor daughters), and total dependence on friends’ charity.
– Assets blocked for years — only fully unlocked  48 hours before he died

He never got his day in court. Never faced questioning. Never received a sentence. The process simply ended with his death.

This is not justice. This is punishment without end, cruelty without limit.

A man who dedicated his life to public service — a papiloscopist in the Federal Police, a union leader fighting for officers’ rights — reduced to begging for access to his own money so he could fight for his life. And the system that claims to defend democracy waited until his final breaths to release what was always his.

Where is the outrage from those who scream “democracy” every day? Where are the editorials condemning this inhumanity? Where is the same energy spent on common prisoners who receive medical furlough, early release, or humane treatment?

The contrast is sickening. Drug traffickers, murderers, and corrupt politicians often walk free or enjoy hospital privileges. But a retired cop who supported a protest? He dies monitored, broke, and abandoned.

This case exposes the rot at the heart of Brazil’s current judicial-political machine: selective application of law, medieval financial strangulation, and zero regard for human life when the target wears the wrong political shirt.

Honorato is gone. But his story screams one undeniable truth: **enough injustice**.

Stop the political prisoners.
Stop the eternal pre-trial punishments.
Stop pretending this is about “defending institutions” when it’s clearly about destroying people.

The blood of José Fernando Honorato stains those who could have acted with mercy but chose vengeance instead.

May God grant his family strength — and may He grant Brazil the courage to end this nightmare before more names join the list.

Rest in peace, warrior. Your suffering will not be forgotten.
And justice — real justice — will come, one way or another.

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