Brazil Sends Murderer of American Missionary Back to Prison

Dorothy StangAmerican missionary Sister Dorothy Stang, who worked with poor people, often landless farmers, in northern Brazil in a part of the state of Pará known for land conflicts, was assassinated on February 12, 2005. A farmer, Vitalmiro Bastos de Moura, aka Bida, was found guilty of the crime and sentenced to 30 years in prison.

But, as a 30-year sentence is the maximum in Brazil, which doesn’t have death penalty, legislation requires a second trial to confirm the sentence. At his second trial, Bida was found not guilty.

At the time of the second trial, and since then, Bida has been free due to a habeas corpus, which was granted pending an appeal by his defense lawyers of the first sentence.

Yesterday, February 4, an appellate court (STJ – 5º turma – 5th circuit) ordered him back to jail. The decision was not unanimous. One of the judges, Arnaldo Esteves Lima, the same judge who gave him the habeas corpus, cited the fact that technically Bida was innocent because of the decision in his second trial, and voted against sending him back to prison.

But the majority of the judges accepted another decision in December 2009 by Pará state’s Justice Court based on a lawsuit filed by government attorneys, which annulled the second trial.

The Dorothy Stang murder has become an international cause célèbre, but achieving some form of justice and closure frustrating and confusing.

To make matters worse, the man who is believed to have been the mastermind behind the crime, the person who ordered and paid for it, another landowning farmer, Regivaldo Pereira Galvão, aka Taradão (Big Pervert), has been indicted but, five years after the crime, still has not gone on trial, not even once.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

World’s Top Vaccine Scientists Gathered in Brazil See Bright and Challenging Future

Many new vaccines that have the potential to save millions of lives are in ...

Brazil Group in Charge of Cleaning the Police Indicted for Murder and Torture

Brazil’s Special Group for Fighting Organized Crime (Gaeco) of the state of Paraná has ...

Slum

Always in shirt sleeves, without Sunday or holiday, not missing any occasion to steal ...

Case of Farc-PT Scandal Closed by Brazilian Senate

The investigation of the alleged donation of US$ 5 million by the Revolutionary Armed ...

Volkswagen Brazil Strike Means 900 Less Cars a Day

Volkswagen Brazil workers voted Wednesday, August 30, to halt all activities in protest over ...

Canada Firm Bets on Brazilian Diamonds

Canada-based Braz Diamond Mining Inc. now controls Brazil’s largest known diamondiferous kimberlite. The company ...

Lula Wants to Know Why Brazil’s Basic Monthly Phone Fee Jumped from US$ 3 to US$ 18

Brazil’s Minister of Communications, Hélio Costa, said that, at the request of President Luiz ...

Amazon: Brazil Talks Tough While Acting as a Banana Republic

In early April, Brazil broke off relations with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights ...

Uruguay Wants Mexico in Mercosur to Counterbalance Brazil

Uruguay wants Mexico to join Mercosur so a "better internal balance" can be achieved, ...

Brazilian former president Fernando Henrique Cardoso

Brazil’s Cardoso Writes a Poison Pen Letter

When former President Fernando Henrique Cardoso’s memoirs, A Arte da Política, were published earlier ...