Conservative Fury Erupts as STF Frees Lava Jato’s Convicted and the Speed at Bolsonaro Case: A Betrayal of Justice

By Laiz Rodrigues

This is why the Supreme Court is so cozy with injustices

March 26, 2025- Hotspotorlando News. A tidal wave of conservative fury has crashed over Brazil  with not a single individual convicted under Operation Car Wash (Lava Jato) still behind bars—a travesty pinned squarely on the Supreme Federal Court (STF). Once a symbol of justice triumphing over corruption, Lava Jato’s legacy has been shredded by the STF’s relentless rulings, and now, the court’s lightning-fast pursuit of cases against former President Jair Bolsonaro has conservatives crying foul, branding it a blatant double standard and a betrayal of the Brazilian people.

Lava Jato’s Collapse: A Conservative Nightmare
Operation Car Wash, launched in 2014, was a conservative rallying cry—a historic crusade that nailed 278 convictions and jailed 295 corrupt elites, from former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva to Petrobras executives and Odebrecht kingpins. It clawed back over 4.3 billion reais ($800 million USD) and promised an end to Brazil’s culture of impunity. For the right, it was sacred ground, proof that the powerful could finally face consequences.

That dream is dead. Every last Lava Jato convict now walks free, their sentences obliterated by STF decisions that conservatives slam as a judicial conspiracy. Justice Dias Toffoli’s 2023 annulment of Odebrecht’s plea deal evidence and his 2024 suspension of 8.5 billion reais in fines against Novonor (formerly Odebrecht) are Exhibits A and B in what the right calls a “rescue operation” for the corrupt. Lula’s convictions? Wiped out in 2021 in just 90 days—a pace at least 14 times faster than Lava Jato’s grueling years-long slog through lower courts. For conservatives, it’s not justice; it’s a leftist judiciary running amok.

The Bolsonaro Case: STF’s Hypocrisy in Hyperdrive
If the STF’s dismantling of Lava Jato wasn’t galling enough, its breakneck speed in targeting Jair Bolsonaro has pushed conservative outrage to a boiling point. Since losing power in 2023, Bolsonaro has faced a barrage of STF-led investigations—over alleged coup plotting tied to the January 8, 2023, insurrection, falsified vaccine records, and more. Unlike Lava Jato’s plodding pace, these cases have rocketed forward. Take the coup probe: within months of January 8, the STF, led by Justice Alexandre de Moraes, had issued arrests, seized assets, and hauled Bolsonaro allies before the court—all at a clip that dwarfs the years Lava Jato spent building its cases.

Conservatives see a glaring double standard. “Lula’s freed in a heartbeat, but Bolsonaro’s hunted like a dog,” one X user fumed, echoing a sentiment rippling across right-wing circles. The STF’s efficiency—resolving Lava Jato appeals in as little as 2-4 months while fast-tracking Bolsonaro’s legal woes— reeks of political vendetta to the right. Where Lava Jato took 1,200+ days to climb the judicial ladder, the STF’s pursuit of Bolsonaro feels like a sprint, with raids and rulings piling up in weeks.

The Right Roars Back
The STF has become a lightning rod for conservative wrath. Online, hashtags like #STFVergonha (STF Shame) trend as users decry a court they accuse of shielding confessed criminals while hounding their champion, Bolsonaro. “They buried Lava Jato to save Lula, and now they’re burying Bolsonaro to kill the right,” a prominent conservative influencer raged. Street protests in São Paulo and Brasília feature banners branding the STF “the enemy of the people,” with some invoking military intervention—a throwback to Bolsonaro’s base.

Sergio Moro, Lava Jato’s iconic ex-judge turned senator, has fanned the flames, blasting the STF for “torching justice” with its selective speed. Allies in the Novo Party and Bolsonaro’s PL faction warn that Brazil’s sliding back into a pre-Lava Jato abyss, where the corrupt thrive and the righteous are persecuted. The appointment of Lula’s former lawyer, Justice Cristiano Zanin, to the STF in 2023 only deepens the sense of a rigged game.

A Fight for Brazil’s Soul
For conservatives, the STF’s actions—freeing Lava Jato’s guilty at warp speed while chasing Bolsonaro with equal haste—aren’t just legal maneuvers; they’re an assault on their vision of Brazil. Lula’s return to power, enabled by the STF, stings as the ultimate humiliation, while Bolsonaro’s legal peril feels like a targeted purge of the right. Calls for action are mounting: some demand term limits for justices, others a constitutional rewrite to leash the court.

The fury is raw and unyielding. “The STF has spat on the people’s trust,” a protester roared at a recent rally. “They’ve freed the thieves and caged our hope.” As Brazil teeters on this judicial fault line, conservatives vow to fight back, seeing in the STF’s double-edged speed not just a betrayal of justice—but a declaration of war.

 

 

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