Los Angeles Times

Brazil charges dozens in riot

Prosecutor­s pursue 39 people in the pro-Bolsonaro attack, with more expected.

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BRASILIA — The office of Brazil’s prosecutor general has presented its first charges against some of the hundreds of people who authoritie­s say stormed government buildings in an effort to overturn former President Jair Bolsonaro’s loss in the October election.

The prosecutor­s in the recently formed group to combat anti-democratic acts also have requested that the 39 defendants charged in the ransacking of Congress be imprisoned as a preventive measure and that $7.7 million of their assets be frozen to help cover the damage.

The defendants have been charged with armed criminal associatio­n, violent attempt to subvert the democratic state of law, staging a coup and damage to public property, the prosecutor general’s office said in a written statement Monday night. Their identities have not yet been released.

More than a thousand people were arrested on the day of the Jan. 8 riot, which bore strong similariti­es to the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol by a mob of Donald Trump supporters who tried to overturn the then-president’s election loss.

Rioters who stormed through the Brazilian Congress, the presidenti­al palace and the Supreme Federal Court in the capital, Brasilia, sought to have the armed forces intervene and overturn Bolsonaro’s loss to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

The rioters “attempted, with the use of violence and serious threat, to abolish the democratic rule of law, preventing or restrictin­g the exercise of constituti­onal powers,” according to an excerpt of charges included in a statement. “The ultimate objective of the attack ... was the installati­on of an alternativ­e government regime.”

The attackers were not charged with terrorism because under Brazilian law such a charge must involve xenophobia or prejudice based on race, ethnicity or religion.

The prosecutor general’s office sent its charges to the Supreme Federal Court after the Senate’s president, Rodrigo Pacheco, last week provided a list of people accused of rampaging through Congress.

Additional rioters are expected to be charged.

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