Los Angeles Times

Brazil investigat­es justice’s death

The Supreme Court jurist had been expected to rule in a major corruption case.

- Associated press

SAO PAULO, Brazil — Brazilian authoritie­s on Friday were investigat­ing a plane crash that killed the Supreme Court justice in charge of a major corruption case just weeks before he was scheduled to issue a ruling that could have revealed accusation­s against politician­s in several Latin American countries.

The death of Justice Teori Zavascki, 68, in Thursday’s crash is likely to delay, though not derail, the socalled Car Wash investigat­ion, the largest corruption investigat­ion in Brazil’s history. Investigat­ors allege that inflated contracts with state oil giant Petrobras and other state-run companies yielded billions of dollars for bribes and election campaigns.

The small plane went down in heavy rains Thursday just off the coast of Paraty, a colonial town and popular coastal vacation spot about 155 miles west of Rio de Janeiro. Rescuers said Friday that they had recovered all five bodies from the crash — Zavascki, the pilot, a businessma­n, a woman who worked for the businessma­n, and her mother.

Although the cause was unclear, many Brazilians voiced fears of foul play since Zavascki held such an important role in the corruption investigat­ion, in which dozens of politician­s and businessme­n already have been jailed. Transparen­cy Internatio­nal called for a full investigat­ion into the crash, and federal police and the public prosecutor have opened probes alongside those of aviation authoritie­s.

The plane’s voice recorder was found Friday and is being sent to an air force laboratory, the Brazilian air force said in a statement. The wreckage of the plane will also be analyzed.

The prosecutor’s office has already asked aviation authoritie­s for documents about the plane’s maintenanc­e and the cockpit recordings.

While the Car Wash probe — known as “Lava Jato” in Brazil — has been led by a team of prosecutor­s and Judge Sergio Moro in the southern city of Curitiba, Zavascki handled cases involving politician­s. Under Brazilian law, only the Supreme Court can decide to charge or jail federal politician­s.

Zavascki had been reviewing dozens of plea bargains of former and current executives of the Odebrecht constructi­on company, which was one of the main players in the kickback scheme that prosecutor­s say yielded more than $2 billion in bribes over a decade.

The justice was expected to decide which of the Odebrecht plea bargains to validate by February, and his death will probably drag out that timeline. Validation would make them public, potentiall­y implicatin­g dozens of politician­s in Brazil and several other countries where Odebrecht did business.

President Michel Temer, who could be one of those implicated in the plea bargains, is supposed to name Zavascki’s successor, who would typically take over the deceased justice’s caseload.

However, the court itself could also decide to transfer Zavascki’s cases to a sitting justice, and the country’s bar associatio­n encouraged the court to do so.

About 100 politician­s and business executives have already been arrested or are under investigat­ion in Brazil in the probe of alleged money laundering and other corruption. In addition to Temer, senior Cabinet members and close aides and allies of the president have been implicated in testimony from some of those arrested.

 ?? Andressa Anholete AFP/Getty Images ?? JUSTICE TEORI ZAVASCKI died Thursday in a plane crash. The so-called Car Wash investigat­ion could implicate politician­s in several countries.
Andressa Anholete AFP/Getty Images JUSTICE TEORI ZAVASCKI died Thursday in a plane crash. The so-called Car Wash investigat­ion could implicate politician­s in several countries.

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