STF: Ministers articulate disapproval of CPI report – 04/14/2026 – Politics

Ministers of the (Federal Supreme Court) assess that the court’s proposal by the CPI (Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry) into Organized Crime had an electoral bias and went beyond the original scope of the parliamentary investigation.

Ministers are already trying to articulate with parliamentarians the disapproval of the report proposed by the senator (MDB-SE). The initiative is considered regrettable, unfair and technically mistaken, according to reports made to interlocutors by five ministers.

Vieira called for the ministers to be indicted for crimes of responsibility, crimes that could lead to impeachment proceedings. An alleged omission by the Attorney General of the Republic, in relation to the Banco Master cases, was also highlighted.

HAS Sheet Gilmar said that “it’s kind of like the rapporteur.” Privately, two other ministers assess that Vieira, by attacking the STF, wants to attract the Bolsonarist electorate to guarantee his re-election in October.

On social media, the Supreme Minister wrote that “it is irresponsible to investigate organized crime and not deal with militiamen, drug traffickers, sellers of illegal weapons, illegal mining, factions that control territories, killers and gunmen.”

Dino said that criticism and investigations must be carried out, but that treating the STF as a national problem is a “gigantic historical error”. The minister cites court decisions against organized crime and ends the text by providing “personal solidarity with colleagues who are victims of injustice.”

A group of ministers also assesses that the report is legally inconsistent, since those involving crimes of responsibility are governed by the Impeachment Law, whose admissibility is given by the Board of , and not by a CPI.

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The Dean of the Supreme Court said that the CPI’s excesses “may constitute an abuse of authority and must be rigorously investigated” by the . The minister is an advocate of establishing guidelines for the actions of parliamentary committees, to avoid arbitrariness.

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