Zanin Strikes Again: Lula’s Personal Lawyer Shuts Down Probe into Massive Banco Master Scandal
Once again, the Brazilian Supreme Court—packed with loyalists—delivers a blatant favor to the establishment while ordinary Brazilians suffer the consequences of unchecked corruption.
Minister Cristiano Zanin, handpicked by President Lula after years as his personal attorney, just slammed the door on a legitimate effort to investigate the explosive Banco Master fraud case. Deputy Rodrigo Rollemberg tried the only route left when the Chamber leadership stonewalled: he filed a writ of mandamus to force installation of a CPI. Zanin didn’t just deny it—he buried it under procedural excuses and kicked the ball back to Chamber President Hugo Motta, the very man accused of sitting on his hands.
Let’s be crystal clear: this isn’t about “defects” in paperwork or “separation of powers.” This is naked protection of powerful interests tied to the current regime. When the target was a conservative government during the COVID years, the STF had zero hesitation ordering a CPMI into existence. Barroso and company forced the Senate’s hand without blinking. But now, when the scandal touches friends of the Planalto, involves billions in questionable public fund maneuvers, BRB connections in the capital, and whispers of high-level involvement? Suddenly the Court discovers judicial restraint and procedural purity.
The hypocrisy burns. Zanin—who literally defended Lula in court before getting the lifetime robe—rules that there’s no “clear violation” or “personal resistance” from Motta worth forcing. Yet everyone watching Brazilian politics knows exactly why that CPI hasn’t moved: too many powerful names would end up exposed. The same crowd that screams about democracy and institutions every time someone questions the STF now hides behind “internal procedures” to avoid real accountability.
This decision isn’t justice. It’s cover. It’s the judicial branch acting as bodyguard for the executive branch’s allies. Brazilians deserve answers about how public resources got funneled, how irregularities ballooned into a multi-billion mess, and who benefited. Instead, they get another layer of impunity from a Supreme Court that increasingly looks like an extension of the ruling party’s legal department.
The message is loud and clear to every patriot: if you’re not in the club, your demands for transparency will be dismissed on technicalities. If you are in the club, the rules bend, the precedents shift, and the investigations vanish.
Enough is enough. The Brazilian people aren’t fooled by these maneuvers anymore. The STF’s selective activism is eroding whatever trust remains in our institutions. When former defense lawyers wear the robes and block probes that could embarrass their old clients, we no longer have a court—we have a shield.
The fight for truth doesn’t end here. The opposition, real conservatives, and every citizen who values honesty must keep pressing. Demand the CPI. Expose the double standards. Because if Banco Master stays buried, the next scandal will be even bigger—and the cover-up even bolder.
Brazil deserves better than this rigged game.

