Débora Zampier Reporter Agencia Brasil
Brasilia – In the mensalão trial, Penal Case 470, that began yesterday afternoon at the Brazilian Supreme Court (“STF”), time is an important factor. Not only with regard to statutes of limitations for what happened in the past, but also because of future deadlines that loom on the horizon and could have serious consequences.
Brazil’s famously relaxed attitude toward most things contrasts sharply with some surprisingly rigid rules and regulations that pop up from time to time. One of them is a strict mandatory retirement age for Supreme Court justices. They are out when they reach 70 – no ifs, buts or maybes.
Associate justice Cezar Peluso faces mandatory retirement at the beginning of September when he turns 70. Under normal circumstances, as the trial will last until the end of September, Peluso would not be able to present his opinion (vote) because of another rigid rule that determines the order in which the justices vote (Peluso is seventh). However, there is a loophole. In the STF rules it is permitted for a justice to vote beforehand (Peluso could jump the line and move to third place). But even then, there are problems. It is not known what the mechanics of the voting process will be because the case is so complicated with so many defendants, so many charges and counts, with many possible sentences. For example, the justices could vote on the whole case at once. On the other hand, they could vote on parts of it defendant by defendant or charge by charge.. In the latter case, with the justices following the same rigid voting sequence (redator first, followed by revisor, then the remaining justices in reverse order of seniority) once again it is possible Peluso will not be able to participate.
A final problem for Peluso is that it will be very difficult for him to participate in what is known as the deliberation/definition phase (“ponderação/definação”) if this phase takes place (it is the equivalent of sentencing, which has been described as where the rubber hits the road in the justice system; it is when judges can exercise a certain amount of discretion as they mete out punishment within a range prescribed by legislation).
Besides Peluso, the mandatory retirement rule threatens the participation of the Chief Justice, Carlos Ayres Britto, if the trial goes into the month of November.
If Peluso and Britto leave the court there are no rules about when they have to be substituted; that is, when president Dilma Rousseff has to nominate someone and when the Senate has to approve the nomination.
A different matter is the 2012 midterm election that will be taking place at the same time as the mensalão trial (the first round of voting takes place on October 7 and, if necessary, in cities with population of over 200,000, runoff elections on October 28. At stake in these elections are city government (mayor) and council seats). Defense lawyers have unsuccessfully attempted to have the trial postponed until after the elections (out of the 38 defendants only one, federal deputy João Paulo Cunha (PT-SP) is running for office – mayor of the city of Osasco in the greater metropolitan region of São Paulo. From 2003 to 2005 he was president of the Chamber of Deputies. In April 2006, after the mensalão scandal became public, the Chamber of Deputies voted not to expel him and later that year voters in São Paulo returned him to the Chamber of Deputies. One other defendant, Professor Luizinho (Luiz Carlos da Silva), formerly a federal deputy, is a campaign manager for Carlos Grana who is a PT candidate for mayor of Santo André, also in the greater São Paulo region).
Then there is the statute of limitations – or rather, statutes of limitations – because the defendants are accused of committing up to seven different crimes and at this point Brazil’s culture of impunity comes into play. As lesser crimes have a shorter statute of limitations, the result is that if defendants are found guilty of conspiracy (“formação de quadrilha”), active and/or passive corruption (“corrupção ativa e passiva”), peculation or malfeasance; that is, misuse of public office or resources for private gain (“peculação”) or illegal remittance of funds out of the country (“evasão de divisas”) and given minimum sentences they could simply walk because the statute of limitations on these crimes ran out in August 2011.
However, anyone found guilty of the more serious crimes of fraudulent management in a financial institution (embezzlement) and money laundering could still go to jail.
Allen Bennett – translator/editor The News in English
Link - Julgamento do mensalão terá corrida contra o tempo