Hunting Down Moraes: Trump’s Lawyer Reveals Plan to Serve Brazilian Supreme Court Justice and Trigger International Consequences
By Hotspotnews
The hammer has already fallen, and now the chase is on.
On July 30, 2025, the U.S. Treasury Department officially sanctioned Alexandre de Moraes under the Global Magnitsky Act for gross human-rights abuses, freezing any assets he holds in the United States and banning American citizens and companies from doing business with him. His wife and close associates were hit in a second wave in September. Yet, as every conservative knows, slapping sanctions on a rogue judge is only step one. Real accountability requires personal service of process and, if necessary, trial in absentia.
That is exactly what Martin de Luca, attorney for Trump Media and Rumble, confirmed this week in an interview now spreading like wildfire across patriotic Brazilian channels. Speaking on behalf of President Trump’s legal interests, de Luca revealed that his team is still aggressively pursuing every legal avenue to formally serve Justice Moraes with the federal lawsuits filed against him in Florida and Washington, D.C. Brazilian authorities have thrown up every possible roadblock, refusing to honor international treaties on judicial cooperation, but de Luca was blunt: “We are not stopping. We are exploring every alternative method of service recognized under U.S. and international law.”
Translation for conservatives on both sides of the equator: if the Lula government and the Supreme Court continue shielding their star censor, the American courts will simply proceed without him. Judgment in absentia, followed by enforcement actions against any assets or interests Moraes still tries to hide through third parties. The Magnitsky sanctions were the warning shot; the civil judgments now in motion could be the kill shot.
This is poetic justice in real time. Moraes spent years acting as prosecutor, judge, and executioner, banning X, ordering midnight raids on journalists and grandmothers, and jailing Bolsonaro supporters without due process, all while claiming to “defend democracy.” Now the tables have turned. The same international mechanisms he once mocked are closing in, and the Biden-era State Department’s hesitation is ancient history: President Trump is back in charge, and his administration is not playing games.
For the global conservative movement, this is more than a legal procedure; it is a template. The Trump–Bolsonaro axis is alive and well. When judicial activists abuse power to silence the right, there are consequences that cross borders. De Luca’s message was unmistakable: no matter how many bureaucratic walls the Brazilian deep state erects, American courts will find a way to hold Moraes personally liable.
The left will scream “interference in sovereignty.” Let them. True sovereignty belongs to the people, not to black-robed oligarchs who rewrite the constitution on a whim. The sanctions are already in place, the lawsuits are advancing, and the process server is still hunting.
Keep praying, keep fighting, and keep watching. The captain in Brazil needs may be in exile, but his allies in Washington never abandoned the field.
God bless the United States, God bless Brazil, and God bless the cause of freedom.

