Brazil’s War on Crime: When Judges Side with Gangsters Over Good Citizens

By Hotspotnews

 

In the heart of Rio de Janeiro, where families live in fear of bullets flying through the night, brave police officers did their job on October 29, 2025. They stormed a hideout of the brutal Comando Vermelho gang, a group that terrorizes neighborhoods and poisons communities with drugs and violence. The result? Seventeen dangerous suspects taken down. No more threats from them. No more nightmares for the people they preyed on.

This should have been a win for Brazil. A clear sign that law enforcement is fighting back against the chaos that has gripped our cities for too long. But instead, it sparked outrage from the wrong corner: the Supreme Court. Justice Gilmar Mendes stepped up during a court session and called the whole thing a “lamentable episode.” He lectured about human rights and pushing limits on police actions. Another judge, Flávio Dino, nodded along. It’s like they’re more worried about the feelings of killers than the safety of everyday Brazilians.

Let’s be real. The Comando Vermelho isn’t some club of misunderstood kids. These are hardened criminals who run favelas like their personal kingdoms, smuggling drugs, extorting families, and gunning down anyone who gets in their way. Police lethality is high—over 6,000 deaths in 2024 alone—because the job is tough. Officers face automatic weapons and no mercy. When they act, it’s to protect the innocent, not to play nice with thugs.

But here’s the rub: Mendes and his crowd aren’t just talking theory. This smells like politics. President Lula’s Workers’ Party (PT) has long been accused of cozying up to these gangs. Remember the whispers of PT ties to traffickers? It’s no secret in Brazil’s streets. Critics are blunt: the PT is the “Party of Traffickers.” When judges like Mendes, who owe their robes to left-wing allies, cry foul over a successful raid, it feels like they’re shielding their friends. Why else rush to defend suspects before the full story even hits the news?

Brazil’s people are tired of this. We’re tired of burying kids caught in crossfire because gangs run wild. We’re tired of elites in Brasília sipping coffee while moms in Rio bolt their doors every night. Law and order isn’t a slogan—it’s survival. Police need our backing, not lectures from judges who wouldn’t last five minutes in the favelas they claim to protect.

It’s time for conservatives to speak up loud and clear. Support the cops who risk it all. Demand accountability from courts that forget who they serve. And hold leaders like Lula to the fire: put Brazil first, not your shady bedfellows. If we don’t, the gangs win, and the good people of Rio lose everything.

The October 29 raid wasn’t lamentable. It was necessary. Let’s honor the heroes in uniform and tell the soft-on-crime crowd: enough is enough. Brazil deserves better.

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