Judicial Overreach in the Banco Master Probe: When Supreme Court Auxiliaries Script Police Interrogations

By Hotspotnews

A disturbing scene has emerged from the high-profile investigation into Banco Master, the now-defunct financial institution at the center of alleged multi-billion-real fraud schemes. During the formal questioning of bank owner Daniel Vorcaro, a judge acting as an auxiliary to Supreme Federal Court Minister Dias Toffoli stepped in to halt the Federal Police delegate mid-interrogation. The reason? The questions being asked strayed — even slightly — from a narrowly drafted script that Minister Toffoli’s office had previously approved.

Federal Police delegate Janaína Palazzo, who was conducting the deposition as part of Operation Compliance Zero, reportedly apologized on record after being corrected and redirected to stick to the pre-authorized list of inquiries. The exchange, now public after the lifting of secrecy on several key testimonies, has stunned observers who still believe in the basic separation between judicial oversight and day-to-day police investigative work.

From a traditional conservative perspective committed to limited government, institutional independence, and the rule of law, this moment should alarm every Brazilian who values accountability over concentrated power.

The Polícia Federal exists to follow evidence wherever it leads — not to operate as an extension of any minister’s cabinet. When a Supreme Court auxiliary can interrupt live questioning, impose a pre-vetted script, and effectively limit what lines of inquiry a seasoned delegate may pursue, the appearance (and arguably the reality) of investigative neutrality collapses.

This is not mere procedural housekeeping. The Banco Master case involves enormous sums of money, disputed credit operations allegedly sold to a public institution (BRB), conflicting accounts from Central Bank officials and bank executives, and serious questions about who knew what and when. In such circumstances, the last thing the public needs is any perception that powerful figures can shape — or constrain — the scope of police fact-finding in real time.

Conservatives have long warned against the steady encroachment of judicial power into spheres that properly belong to the executive or legislative branches. The Constitution assigns distinct roles to each power precisely to prevent any one of them from dominating the others. Directing police interrogations from the STF’s auxiliary bench crosses a line that should never be crossed lightly.

None of this commentary prejudges Daniel Vorcaro’s ultimate legal responsibility; guilt or innocence must be determined through due process. What is already clear, however, is that the process itself has been compromised in the public eye. When investigators must pause to seek judicial permission before asking the next logical question, confidence in the entire system suffers.

Brazil urgently needs to reaffirm a simple principle: police must be allowed to investigate freely within the law, judges must adjudicate impartially, and no single figure — however highly placed — should be in a position to script or veto legitimate lines of police inquiry. Anything less invites cynicism, weakens institutions, and betrays the foundational idea that no one is above scrutiny.

The rule of law is not served by controlled interrogations. It is served by fearless, independent pursuit of the truth. Anything short of that standard is a step backward for Brazilian democracy.

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