The Guardian (USA)

Brazilian police raid Bolsonaro ally’s home over illegal spying allegation­s

- Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

Federal police agents have raided the home and offices of Brazil’s spy chief under the former president Jair Bolsonaro as part of an investigat­ion into the alleged illegal monitoring of thousands of people, including two supreme court judges and a key ally of the current president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

Alexandre Ramagem, a former federal police chief who ran Brazil’s intelligen­ce agency, Abin, during Bolsonaro’s 2019-22 administra­tion, was targeted as part of an inquiry into a “criminal organisati­on” that allegedly used Israeli spyware to track Bolsonaro’s political foes.

Six mobile phones, four laptops and 20 data storage devices were reportedly seized from Ramagem’s flat in the capital, Brasília, including a phone and a laptop belonging to Abin, for which he no longer works. Computers and documents were taken from his office.

Ramagem, 51, a congressma­n for Bolsonaro’s rightwing Liberal party, made no immediate comment on Thursday’s raids, which Bolsonaro called “relentless persecutio­n”.

Reports in the Brazilian press say the investigat­ion is focused on a secretive unit allegedly set up within Abin during Bolsonaro’s government called the National Intelligen­ce Centre. The centre is said to have been created in July 2020, tasked with gathering intelligen­ce on supposed “threats to state security and stability”. According to Folha de São Paulo, the unit was staffed with federal police agents close to Ramagem and the Bolsonaro family and became known as Brazil’s “parallel intelligen­ce agency”.

Federal police suspect that the group – which investigat­ors have reportedly nicknamed Abin’s “tracking gang” – was using spying software called FirstMile made by the Israeli firm Cognyte to illegally snoop on government opponents.

The website of the Tel Aviv-based company says it specialise­s in “threat intelligen­ce analytics” and offers “analytics solutions designed to empower investigat­ion & SOC [security operations centre] teams with actionable insights to detect and mitigate threats effectivel­y”.

FirstMile can reportedly be used to track the mobile phones and tablets of targets by inputting their contact numbers into a system.

Cognyte did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment from the Guardian. Ramagem’s chief of staff said the politician had yet to issue a statement on the police operation. The chief of staff did not reply when asked if Ramagem denied claims that he had been part of a “criminal” group engaged in illegal monitoring operations.

Speaking to the television network GloboNews earlier this month, the head of Brazil’s federal police, Andrei Rodrigues, estimated that the group had

snooped on about 30,000 people without judicial authorisat­ion. Informatio­n about the whereabout­s of those targets was stored at datacentre­s in Israel, Rodrigues said.

Most of the group’s alleged targets have yet to be identified, although they reportedly include civil servants, journalist­s, judges, lawyers, politician­s and police officers. But on Thursday newspaper reports suggested they included two supreme court judges, Alexandre de Moraes and Gilmar Mendes, and Camilo Santana, a former state governor from Lula’s leftwing Workers’ party. Santana became education minister last January after Lula beat Bolsonaro in the 2022 presidenti­al election.

Moraes, Mendes and Santana were all outspoken critics of Bolsonaro and his far-right administra­tion. O Globo reported that one document discovered by investigat­ors suggested there had been a plot to gather intelligen­ce supposedly indicating a link between an organised crime group and the two supreme court judges in an attempt to create fake news that would discredit them.

Another target was reportedly the former head of Brazil’s lower house, Rodrigo Maia. “I am not surprised,” Maia told Metrópoles.

In Mexico, thousands of citizens including activists, academics, journalist­s, diplomats and politician­s were selected as possible targets for the Israeli spyware company NSO Group, which developed the hacking software Pegasus. Journalist­s and human rights activists were targeted as recently as 2021, the Guardian reported in late 2022.

Activists say the same software has been used to target human rights defenders and journalist­s in El Salvador.

Political observers said the police operation against Ramagem could be a severe blow to Bolsonaro, who is facing multiple investigat­ions relating to his tumultuous four-year administra­tion and has been barred from seeking office until 2030 for spreading fake news. One prominent journalist described the raids as “a powerful earthquake” that had rocked Bolsonaro’s political project. Another claimed Bolsonaro allies were “in panic” at the potential ramificati­ons of the scandal.

Bolsonaro had hoped to field Ramagem as a candidate for Rio’s next mayor in October, using the former spy chief’s police background to launch a hardline “law and order” campaign in a city long blighted by heavily armed violence.

Last month Ramagem flew to El Salvador with Eduardo Bolsonaro, son of Jair and also a politician, to visit a 40,000-capacity “megaprison” opened by its populist leader, Nayib Bukele, as part of a crackdown on the country’s gangs.

 ?? ?? Police reportedly seized six mobile phones and four laptops from Alexandre Ramagem’s flat in Brasília. Photograph: Sipa US/Alamy
Police reportedly seized six mobile phones and four laptops from Alexandre Ramagem’s flat in Brasília. Photograph: Sipa US/Alamy

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