Perfil (Sabado)

> SERGIO MORO PUTS LEGACY ON LINE

- – BY PETER PRENGAMAN

Sergio Moro, the Brazilian judge at the centre of one of the largest corruption investigat­ions in history, has agreed to become justice minister in the government of Presidente­lect Jair Bolsonaro, a decision that will be hailed by Brazilians eager for a crackdown on graft but also add to deep polarisati­on.

Moro is wildly popular among conservati­ves and loathed by many on the left,s oh is deci si ont ojo int he incoming administra­tion will feed the suspicion of many Brazilians that the judge was politicall­y biased in jailing former president Luiz Inácio da Silva, a conviction that forced the poll-leading leftist out of the presidenti­al race.

Moro met with Bolsonaro at the president-elect’s home in Rio de Janeiro on Thursday. Upon emerging, Moro said nothing but soon after he put out a statement confirming he had accepted an offer to lead both the Justice and Public Security ministries, which will be combined.

Moro said it would be hard to give up being a federal judge after 22 years, but said he saw an opportunit­y to“implementa­s trong agenda ofan ti-c orrupt ion andan ti-orga ni sedcri me .” He added: “In practice, this will mean consolidat­ing the advance against crime and corruption of the last years.” He said that the sprawling Lava Jato (“Car Wash”) investigat­ion would continue in the hands of local judges in the southern city of Curitiba, where Moro lives and many of the cases have been tried.

Launched in 2014, the Lava Jato p robe unco ve red elabora tes che me sin which constructi­on companies received bloated contracts and then kicked back billions of dollars in bribes to politician­s and other government officials over more than a decade. The level of corruption was breathtaki­ng for Brazilians long inured to graft, and the scandal has reverberat­ed across several Latin-American countries where Odebrecht, one of the companies at the centre of the scandal, did business.

The investigat­ion has led to the jailing of many of the country’s biggest names. That list includes Lula, convicted by Moro of corruption for trading favours with constructi­on company Grupo OAS. Lula began serving a 12-year sentence in April.

The cases made Moro a wildly popular figure; earlier this year, he tracked highly in presidenti­al polls even though the judge did not run.

However, many of his tactics have been highly controvers­ial, such as the use of extended pre-trial detentions and plea bargains, both aimed at getting high-profile suspects to talk.

On social media Thursday, many Brazilians shared a 2016 story in the

Estadão daily, which quoted Moro saying he had no political ambitions. “No, never. Never,” he said when asked about getting into politics. “I am a man of the justice system.”

Moro has been accused of being partisan, with supporters of Lula and the left-leaning Workers’ Party (PT) claiming the judge was at the centre of a conspiracy to keep Lula from running for president. The judge has convicted politician­s from across the political spectrum. But he has also made decisions that many interpret as biased, such as releasing wiretapped conversati­ons between Lula and thenpresid­ent Dilma Rousseff in 2016.

Bolsonaro told reporters outside his home late Thursday that Moro had asked for “total liberty” to operate, and he would have it.

Still, the decision comes with huge risks, both for Moro personally and the future of theLava Jato investigat­ions. Members of the “Car Wash” task force have said much work remains.

In leading the combined ministries, Moro will be ultimately responsibl­e for areas that include intractabl­e problems, such as security. Last year, nearly 64,000 people were killed in Brazil, a record for the country. He will oversee the federal police, highway police, the penitentia­ry system, immigratio­n and several other agencies with thousands of employees.

 ?? AP/ /SILVIA IZQUIERDO ?? Sergio Moro leaves a meeting with Jair Bolsonaro, outside the Brazilian presidente­lect’s home in Rio de Janeiro on Thursday.
AP/ /SILVIA IZQUIERDO Sergio Moro leaves a meeting with Jair Bolsonaro, outside the Brazilian presidente­lect’s home in Rio de Janeiro on Thursday.

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