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Saturday, February 28, 2026
Brasilian Politicians Sentenced To More Than 76 Years In Prison For Ordering A Rio de Janeiro Counselor's Murder
Brazilian Politicians Sentenced to More than 76 Years for Ordering Councilor’s Murder
BRAZIL
Brazil
Brazil’s Supreme Court on Wednesday sentenced two politician brothers to 76 years and three months in prison after finding them guilty of ordering the 2018 assassination of Rio de Janeiro city councilor Marielle Franco, closing a high-profile case that exposed ties between politicians and the mafia, the Washington Post reported.
Observers noted that the court’s verdict established a political motive tied to militia-linked land interests. The court said the assassination laid bare how criminal groups can shape local politics through territorial control, intimidation and corruption.
The court found former congressman João Francisco Inácio Brazão, known as Chiquinho Brazão, and his brother Domingos Inácio Brazão guilty of attempted homicide, double homicide and criminal organization.
Two military police officers were also found guilty of assisting in the planning and logistics of the killing, while former Rio police chief Rivaldo Barbosa was sentenced to 18 years for obstruction of justice and passive corruption.
Franco, 38, who was also a human rights activist, was returning from an event with Black women leaders on March 14, 2018, when gunmen in another vehicle opened fire on her car with submachine guns. Franco and her driver Anderson Gomes were killed instantly.
Justice Alexandre de Moraes said Franco had challenged land-grabbing operations and housing developments in areas under the brothers’ influence. The brothers “didn’t just have contact with the militia. They were the militia,” he said.
Prosecutors also claimed that the militia engaged in crimes such as extortion, territorial control and the exploitation of illicit markets such as “charging residents fees for ‘security’ services,” illegally distributing cable TV signals and monopolizing electoral campaigning “by excluding rivals.”
The Supreme Court’s ruling comes after the 2024 confession of Ronnie Lessa, a former military police officer and militia member, who confessed to pulling the trigger and said the Brazão brothers were behind Franco’s murder.
Lessa was sentenced to 78 years for double homicide, attempted homicide and receiving stolen property, including the vehicle used in the crime. Defense attorneys denied the brothers’ involvement and dismissed Lessa’s confession.
Franco’s sister, Anielle – who serves as minister of racial equality in President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s government – welcomed the ruling, saying it had “honored the memory of Marielle and Anderson” and marked “a new historic chapter” in confronting political violence “based on gender and race,” the BBC added.
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