The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: March 30, 2025
Today: March 30, 2025

Former Brazilian President Bolsonaro to stand trial on coup charges, court rules

Former Brazilian President Bolsonaro to stand trial on coup charges, court rules
March 26, 2025
Michael Rios - CNN

(CNN) โ€” Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro should stand trial on charges related to an alleged plot to overturn the 2022 election results, the countryโ€™s Supreme Court has determined.

Bolsonaro was among 34 people charged last month with five crimes, including attempting a coup dโ€™รฉtat. Part of the coup plot, prosecutors allege, involved a plan to potentially assassinate elected President Luiz Inรกcio Lula da Silva, his vice president and a minister of the Supreme Court. Bolsonaro has denied wrongdoing.

The court on Wednesday decided unanimously to fully accept the charges against eight of the accused, including Bolsonaro, his vice presidential candidate and other military and political leaders.

The court will decide the fates of the other 26 people later on.

As the deciding votes were being cast on Wednesday, Bolsonaro posted a message on X, criticizing the judges for moving forward with the case so quickly.

โ€œEveryone says that the process will be concluded by the end of 2025, even though there is no precedent for such speed in a case of this magnitude. And why? Because everyone knows that what is taking place is, in fact, a kind of legal attack on democracy: a political trial, conducted in a partial, biased and openly unfair manner by a completely compromised and suspicious rapporteur,โ€ he said, referring to Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who was the first to vote in favor of accepting the charges in full.

Moraes presented video evidence of the alleged crimes in his opening remarks on Wednesday, saying they were material and serious.

Prosecutor-General Paulo Gonet had argued before the court on Tuesday, the first day of proceedings, that there was enough evidence to move the case to a trial. He claimed that the accused had formed a criminal organization to โ€œgenerate reactions that would guarantee their continuity in power,โ€ regardless of the result of the 2022 election.

โ€œThey all accepted, encouraged and carried out acts that are classified in criminal legislation as an attack against the existence and independence of the Powers and the Democratic State of Law,โ€ he told the court.

Gonet alleged that the coup attempt began in 2021, during Bolsonaroโ€™s presidential term, and culminated in the riots of January 8, 2023, when Bolsonaro supporters stormed and vandalized the three seats of government in Brasilia to reject the 2022 election results.

The former president has repeatedly denied wrongdoing. His lawyer Celso Vilardi argued that there is no evidence his client was involved in the Brasilia riots.

Bolsonaro, who attended Tuesdayโ€™s court session, had told reporters earlier that he expected justice in the case.

โ€œIโ€™m fine. We always expect justice. Nothing is substantiated in the accusations made in a biased manner by the Federal Police,โ€ he said.

He also compared the case to a rigged soccer match, posting on X, โ€œIn my case, the referee whistles against the game before the game even startsโ€ฆ and itโ€™s also the VAR (video assistant referee), the linesman, the coach and the opposing teamโ€™s top scorer; all in one person.โ€

Alleged coup plot

Prosecutors say the alleged coup plot began in 2021 with an effort to undermine public trust in electronic voting machines.

In 2022, Bolsonaro met with ambassadors and diplomatic representatives to discuss the accusations of voting fraud, in what the Attorney Generalโ€™s Office said was โ€œan attempt to prepare the international community for disrespecting the popular will in the presidential elections.โ€

Despite finding no evidence of election fraud, the defendants allegedly continued their campaign to discredit the electoral system, according to prosecutors.

They also allege that Bolsonaro approved a plan to carry out the coup, and that the last attempt to overturn the election happened during the riots of January 8, 2023, which prosecutors claim were encouraged by the defendants.

If found guilty, Bolsonaro could potentially face up to 28 years in prison, according to CNN Brasil.

In 2023, Bolsonaro was banned from public office for eight years after a separate investigation into alleged abuse of power found him guilty of spreading misinformation about the integrity of the Brazilian election apparatus to foreign governments.

The-CNN-Wire
โ„ข & ยฉ 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Share This

Popular

Americas|Crime|US

Ring camera captures the moment a small plane crashes into a home

Ring camera captures the moment a small plane crashes into a home
Americas|Education|Food|Health|Political

Mexico bans junk food sales in schools in its latest salvo against child obesity

Mexico bans junk food sales in schools in its latest salvo against child obesity
Americas|Election|Political|World

Ecuadorian president replaces vice president after long-running feud

Ecuadorian president replaces vice president after long-running feud
Americas|Sports

Ilia Malinin cruises to 2nd straight title to cap an American gold rush at figure skating worlds

Ilia Malinin cruises to 2nd straight title to cap an American gold rush at figure skating worlds

Americas

Americas|Australia|Sports

Min Woo Lee pulls away from Scottie Scheffler and everyone else to lead Houston Open by 4

Min Woo Lee pulls away from Scottie Scheffler and everyone else to lead Houston Open by 4
Americas|Sports|US

Chance McMillian scores 14 points in a losing cause for Texas Tech in his return from an injury

Chance McMillian scores 14 points in a losing cause for Texas Tech in his return from an injury
Americas|Business|Economy|Political|US

US to revoke authorizations to foreign partners of Venezuela's PDVSA, sources say

US to revoke authorizations to foreign partners of Venezuela's PDVSA, sources say
Americas|Business|Economy|Political|US

No sign Trump will honor US auto tariff protections won by Canada, Mexico in 2018

No sign Trump will honor US auto tariff protections won by Canada, Mexico in 2018

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In