• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
Brazil confronts military officers accused of plotting a coup in historic trial

Brazil confronts military officers accused of plotting a coup in historic trial

June 25, 2025
Opinion | ‘Motherhood Should Come With a Warning Label.’

Opinion | ‘Motherhood Should Come With a Warning Label.’

June 25, 2025
Trump is slated to hold a press conference at the NATO summit

Trump is slated to hold a press conference at the NATO summit

June 25, 2025
How the Head of an Embattled Tennessee Youth Detention Center Held on to Power for Decades

A New Trump Plan Gives DHS and the White House Greater Influence in the Fight Against Organized Crime

June 25, 2025
New York City Democratic mayoral primary: Mamdani declares victory, Cuomo concedes before ranked choice votes are counted

New York City Democratic mayoral primary: Mamdani declares victory, Cuomo concedes before ranked choice votes are counted

June 25, 2025
Fragile ceasefire holds as Trump promises peace talks with Iran

Fragile ceasefire holds as Trump promises peace talks with Iran

June 25, 2025
New health toolkit for people with learning disabilities

New health toolkit for people with learning disabilities

June 25, 2025
Why America’s giant bunker-busting bombs may have failed to reach their target

Why America’s giant bunker-busting bombs may have failed to reach their target

June 25, 2025
Trump’s pick for appeals judge seen as ‘ill-suited’ to lifetime appointment

Trump’s pick for appeals judge seen as ‘ill-suited’ to lifetime appointment

June 25, 2025
How the Head of an Embattled Tennessee Youth Detention Center Held on to Power for Decades

How Foreign Scammers Use U.S. Banks to Fleece Americans

June 25, 2025
Mexico holds first-of-its-kind nationwide judicial elections

Rep. Mike Quigley on intel suggesting limited damage to Iran’s nuclear program

June 25, 2025
Mexico holds first-of-its-kind nationwide judicial elections

Trump’s pick for appeals judge draws controversy

June 25, 2025
Mexico holds first-of-its-kind nationwide judicial elections

Zohran Mamdani set to defeat Cuomo in NYC mayoral primary upset

June 25, 2025
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Faith
  • Finance and Trade
  • Our Voices
  • The Watchlist
  • Uncategorized
Wednesday, June 25, 2025
It's That Part™
  • Home
  • Our Voices
  • World News
  • Latest News
  • Commentary
Advertisement
ADVERTISEMENT
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Our Voices
  • World News
  • Latest News
  • Commentary
No Result
View All Result
It's That Part™
No Result
View All Result
Home World News

Brazil confronts military officers accused of plotting a coup in historic trial

by Jesse It’s That Part
June 25, 2025
in World News
0
Brazil confronts military officers accused of plotting a coup in historic trial
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Loose Weight and much more! Loose Weight and much more! Loose Weight and much more!
Create a better and healthier you! Create a better and healthier you! Create a better and healthier you!


SAO PAULO — When Lt. Col. Mauro Cid arrived at Brazil’s Supreme Court on Tuesday to testify against his onetime ally, former Defense Minister Gen. Walter Braga Netto, he did not salute the senior officer.

It was a departure from military protocol that underscored how the country’s once hugely popular military has been divided and roiled by scandal as Brazil tries an explosive case in which top military officers are accused of helping former President Jair Bolsonaro attempt a coup to remain in power after losing an election.

Analysts said that the two men’s appearance in a civilian court marked a historic departure from the impunity senior military officers have enjoyed since the country underwent two decades of military rule.

“Putting a colonel up against a general levels the playing the field and signals that for the justice system, all defendants are equal,” said Lucas Figueiredo, the author of several books about Brazil’s dictatorship. “The truth will prevail.”

Cid, a former aide-de-camp to Bolsonaro who signed a plea bargain to cooperate with authorities, has already testified that Braga Netto took part in a meeting in November 2022 during which military officials discussed plans to stop current President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva from taking office.

Braga Netto is a close ally of Bolsonaro who also served as the former president’s chief-of-staff and his 2022 running mate.

The officers are standing trial alongside Bolsonaro, several other officers, and a few civilians. They face five charges including attempting to stage a coup, involvement in an armed criminal organization, attempted violent abolition of the democratic rule of law, aggravated damage and degredation of listed heritage.

A verdict is expected by the end of 2025.

Cid says that in the days after Bolsonaro lost to Lula, he was called to Braga Netto’s office and handed a bag of cash to distribute to Bolsonaro supporters camped outside the military headquarters. Braga Netto denies the account and calls Cid a traitor.

The two men were summoned to the Supreme Court on Tuesday for a confrontation, a step in Brazilian legal procedure in which the judge and both parties can interrogate witnesses about discrepancies in their testimony.

The examination was conducted behind closed doors by order of Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who is chair the coup probe and did not provide more details about the decision. Brazilian law allows closed court hearings when matters of national security or deeply personal matters are involved.

Braga Netto arrived at the court in the country’s capital of Brasilia from his jail cell in Rio de Janeiro, where he has been detained for obstructing investigations since December.

A staffer of the Supreme Court who observed the testimony told The Associated Press that both Braga Netto and Cid mostly stuck to their contradictory versions of events and avoided even looking at each other despite sitting opposite one another.

The staffer spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to brief the media.

In a heated exchange, the former defense minister shot back that Cid was a “liar,” said Braga Netto’s lawyer, José Luis Oliveira.

Moraes’ decision to call both men for questioning at the same time signaled the judge’s lack of confidence in their testimonies, legal experts and officials said.

The fact that the two men appeared in a civilian court at all was a break from decades of impunity enjoyed by Brazilian senior officers.

No one in Brazil has been sent to jail on charges related to the 1964-1985 military dictatorship, unlike in neighboring countries Argentina and Chile. And Bolsonaro, despite facing a tangle of serious legal charges, remains the face of the country’s opposition to President Lula.

The last Brazilian general to be jailed was Argemiro de Assis Brasil, who was arrested in 1964 for opposing the coup d’etat in which the military seized power.

Since the beginning of the proceedings, members of the military establishment have claimed the Supreme Court trial is an embarrassment to the armed forces.

“Such questioning doesn’t help the armed forces,” said Gen. Roberto Peternelli, a former congressman affiliated with Bolsonaro’s Liberal Party. “In my perspective, it ends up harming the country.”

The accused sought to avoid civilian court by seeking a trial at the country’s Superior Military Tribunal, where legal experts say they were more likely to find sympathy.

The military court, which handles only a few dozen cases a year, refused the cases.

“Members of the military court understood that, though perpetrated by military personnel, these are not military crimes,” said Alexandre Knopfholz, a law professor at UniCuritiba.

Millions of Brazilians have seen the case play out on TV over the past two years, from raids in which federal police arrest suspects and seize documents to court testimony.

Still, some experts doubt that Cid and Braga Netto would end up serving out full sentences behind bars, even if they are found guilty.

“This is the middle of the probe. We should not forget that every coup-mongering military man in Brazilian history was pardoned,” said Fabio Victor, author of a book about the links between the military and politics after Brazil’s transition to democracy in 1985.

But he acknowledged: “The fact that generals have become defendants for an attempted coup does show some evolution.”

____

Hughes reported from Rio de Janeiro.



Source link-

Tags: 123182631ArticleCoups d'etatCourtsDemocracyGeneral newsLegal proceedingsMilitary and defenseTrialsWar and unrestWorld news
Share196Tweet123Share49
Create a healthier you! Create a healthier you! Create a healthier you!
ADVERTISEMENT
Jesse It’s That Part

Jesse It’s That Part

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Trump’s Failed Attempt to Confront South Africa’s President

Trump’s Failed Attempt to Confront South Africa’s President

May 21, 2025
33 Shocking Photos Shown to Diddy’s Federal Trial Jury

33 Shocking Photos Shown to Diddy’s Federal Trial Jury

May 21, 2025
From Ukraine to Greenland, Are Trump’s Geopolitical Ambitions Driven by Mining?

Lawsuit Challenges “Unlawful” Detention of Migrants at Guantánamo Bay

June 5, 2025
Maori MPs face suspension after haka protest in New Zealand parliament

Maori MPs face suspension after haka protest in New Zealand parliament

0
FDA fluoride ban proposal stuns dentists and scientists amid health concerns

FDA fluoride ban proposal stuns dentists and scientists amid health concerns

0
WHO adopts global pandemic accord, but US absence raises concerns

WHO adopts global pandemic accord, but US absence raises concerns

0
Opinion | ‘Motherhood Should Come With a Warning Label.’

Opinion | ‘Motherhood Should Come With a Warning Label.’

June 25, 2025
Trump is slated to hold a press conference at the NATO summit

Trump is slated to hold a press conference at the NATO summit

June 25, 2025
How the Head of an Embattled Tennessee Youth Detention Center Held on to Power for Decades

A New Trump Plan Gives DHS and the White House Greater Influence in the Fight Against Organized Crime

June 25, 2025
Experience sustained energy, improved gut health, enhanced focus, and burn 400 calories for 9 hours straight! Experience sustained energy, improved gut health, enhanced focus, and burn 400 calories for 9 hours straight! Experience sustained energy, improved gut health, enhanced focus, and burn 400 calories for 9 hours straight!
ADVERTISEMENT
It's That Part™

Copyright © 2025 It's That Part.

Navigate Site

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Faith
  • Finance and Trade
  • Our Voices
  • The Watchlist
  • Uncategorized

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Our Voices
  • World News
  • Latest News
  • Commentary

Copyright © 2025 It's That Part.