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 Justice Minister José Gregori has proposed new legislation
to specify just what special status means, and because of
pressure over the ongoing Judge Nicolau affair, it will likely
mean a whole lot less than has been the case until now. By Adhemar Altieri
The past few weeks have offered Brazilians a chance to put some thought into a serious,
decades-old distortion in the country's legal and penal systems. Created in 1941, it
guarantees the distance between haves and have-nots, which characterizes Brazilian
society, is maintained even in prison. For it does just that: guarantee special status for
anyone who ends up in jail but has a university diploma, or meets several other criteria
that in the end, spell "upper echelon".
For decades, this disturbing, backward aspect of Brazilian law went virtually
unchallenged. Accepted by police, the judiciary and the public as normal procedure, it was
seldom openly discussed, let alone seriously questioned. But it became a topic of debate
among legal specialists and society in general, following the arrest last December of the
most wanted man in Brazil in recent yearsformer Labor Judge Nicolau dos Santos Neto.
He stands accused of orchestrating the siphoning of $90 million in public funds from the
construction of a new labor courts headquarters in São Pauloa project he
supervised. Preliminary hearings leading to his trial are now under way.
As a retired judge and former occupant of a senior post, Judge Nicolau was entitled to
"Prisão Especial", as the privilege is known. After eight months on the run
from police in Brazil and abroada time federal prosecutors say the Judge and his
associates spent shifting the stolen millions between numerous accounts in the U.S., the
Caribbean and Europe, to keep the cash out of reach of investigatorshis lawyers
negotiated a surrender to Federal Police.
Terms are said to have included several guarantees: as a prisoner, he would not be
subjected to public humiliation (meaning police would not parade him in front of TV
cameras as is usually the case with "regular" prisoners), nor would the Judge
have to wear handcuffs (again, too humiliating
), and of course, his right to special
status would be respected. He would be kept in proper quarters, as called for in the law.
The people who created "Prisão Especial" obviously believed that if an
exception is going to be written into law, it might as well go all the way. The law is
aimed at periods when a person is in custody prior to the conclusion of a trial. If the
person is found guilty, the privilege ends and the inmate joins the tens of thousands who
inhabit the modern-day dungeons that most prisons in Brazil closely resemble. Terms of the
law written sixty years ago also indicate that dungeon-like conditions are not a new
phenomenon in the Brazilian prison systemthe law was clearly an attempt to spare the
elite who happened to get caught, from the sub-human realities of penal institutions. Most
are desperately overcrowded, poorly built and managed, corruption-filled powder kegs where
attempted breakouts and deadly rebellions happen frequently. In 1941, as in 2001, Brazil's
prisons are no place for university-educated raiders of public funds or other white-collar
types who go astray, really
Higher education however is just a detail. The decree says "Prisão Especial"
must be available for federal cabinet members, state governors and secretaries, mayors,
city councilors, chiefs of police, state and federal legislators, armed forces and police
officers, judges, and anyone who has ever served on a jury. It also specifies that special
inmates must have "adequate" quarters, unlimited access to legal assistance,
unrestricted visits from friends and relatives, uncensored mail, religious assistance when
possible and medical assistance when necessary.
The inmate is guaranteed the right to regular sunshine, does not need to wear a prison
uniform, and does not need to eat what other prisoners are servedrelatives are
allowed to bring outside food. Transportation to hearings and court appearances must also
be "different" from that afforded "regular" prisonersthis is
widely understood in Brazil, but needs explaining to readers abroad: "regular"
prisoners are usually thrown in the back of police wagons, in a trunk-like compartment
without seats. "Different" in this case simply means special prisoners get to
use a seat in the vehicle.
None of these details escaped Judge Nicolau's lawyers, and they demanded that each
detail of his custody match what is specified in the law. Temporary basement holding cells
at the Federal Police custody house in São Paulo were deemed "inappropriate",
so a room was set up for the Judge in the second floor. It included a bed, a couch, no
bars on the door or window, a TV set and a video cassette player. Still not good enough
lawyers said, and they complained to a federal judge who agreed and ordered Judge Nicolau
moved to "proper" quarters. That was when the limit was reached, and the debate
over the very existence of special status truly began: as it turns out, there are no
holding cells anywhere in São Paulo, Brazil's largest city, that meet legal requirements
for "Prisão Especial".
Judge Nicolau was actually moved to what the São Paulo police consider to be special
holding cells, at the 77th Police Precinct in a central part of the city. Once lawyers had
a look at what police say are "the best cells available", reserved for
"special prisoners", they obtained a new court order sending Judge Nicolau back
to his inadequate but cozy second floor room at the Federal Policy custody house.
I had a chance to visit the exact cell which Judge Nicolau shared for a single night
with a lawyer accused of stealing court documents, and a journalist who confessed to the
shooting death of his girlfriendboth awaiting trial. This "special" cell
amounts to a hole in the wallno more than 15 square meters of bare cement shared by
four, sometimes five inmates who sleep on foam mattresses on the floor. A functioning
shower is the main amenity, and there is definitely no sunshine to be had
All of this has been taking place as Judge Nicolau's alleged doings with millions in
taxpayer money have been extensively detailed in the Brazilian media. His trial hasn't
even begun, but he has already gone from most wanted to most despised person in Brazil.
Whenever the Judge is transported anywhere, there's a media frenzy and crowds gather to
shout obscenities. And things can only get worse for the Judge: his lawyers continue to go
on television to complain about his inadequate imprisonment, and calling on the courts to
allow Judge Nicolau to wait for his trial at home "since there are no cells that meet
legal requirements for special prisoners".
With the public becoming increasingly outraged at the situation involving the Judge, a
laborious Justice Ministry official introduced a new twist in the past week. After digging
through old files, he found that the government decree specifying the special status
details Judge Nicolau's lawyers have been fighting so hard for, was revoked in 1991 during
a bit of housecleaningironically, by then-president Fernando Collor de Mello,
himself driven from the presidency because of a massive corruption scandal. In other
words, for a decade now, "Prisão Especial" has continued to exist, even though
there is no valid law detailing what it involves.
Justice Minister José Gregori has proposed new legislation to specify just what
special status means, and because of pressure over the ongoing Judge Nicolau affair, it
will likely mean a whole lot less than has been the case until now. As he advanced a few
details, Gregori revealed that "Prisão Especial" in its new version will
include three basic points: the prisoner will be held separate from convicted inmates,
will be guaranteed an environment "adequate for human existence", and will not
be transported together with regular prisoners. According to the Justice Minister,
"unjustifiable privileges" will be eliminated.
It is unfortunate that Gregori did not see fit to take this opportunity and do away
with any kind of special status in Brazil. He might have listened to the advice of Carlos
Velloso, the presiding judge at Brazil's Supreme Court, who said special status in prison
is in itself an unjustifiable privilege, "because it defies the constitutional
principle of equality, which is the basis of the Republic". Velloso then suggested
that Brazil look at prisons in the broader sense: "It is necessary to build new
prisons, and improve existing ones". A very diplomatic way of reminding the
government that Brazil's prison system is simply disastrous, and that guaranteeing a
better deal for a selected few is no solution at all.
There is, however, a silver lining in this cloud, and it's an important one. In recent
years, several high-profile prisoners benefited from special status, and that gradually
helped to alert Brazilians to this outrageous piece of pure discrimination. Every time a
politician or prominent business personality received special treatment in jail, it raised
eyebrows. The positive aspect is that a dent, however small, is being made on Brazil's
tradition of impunity: more and more, the rich and powerful are being taken to task.
Judge Nicolau and his lawyers went a step further, actually complaining and demanding
more, and that may prove to be the total undoing of "Prisão Especial". There is
every indication the government wants to redefine it quickly, and officials have already
said that whatever it calls for in its new version will be applied immediately to Judge
Nicolau.
Adhemar Altieri is a veteran with major news outlets in Brazil, Canada
and the United States. He holds a Master's Degree in Journalism from Northwestern
University in Evanston, Illinois, and spent ten years with CBS News reporting from Canada
and Brazil. Altieri is a member of the Virtual Intelligence Community, formed by The
Greenfield Consulting Group to identify future trends for Latin America. He is also the
editor of InfoBrazil (http://www.infobrazil.com),
an English-language weekly e-zine with analysis and opinions on Brazilian politics and
economy. You can reach the author at editors@infobrazil.com
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