The Punxsutawney Spirit

Several probes target Brazil’s Bolsonaro, but his COVID decisions are catching up to him first

- By Eléonore Hughes and Mauricio Savarese

HELP WANTED

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — As Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro’s term wound down in the final days of December 2022, he had decided to skip the ritual of handing over the presidenti­al sash to his successor, and instead made plans to travel abroad.

But there was a problem, according to a Federal Police indictment unveiled Tuesday: Bolsonaro didn’t have the necessary vaccinatio­n certificat­e required by U.S. authoritie­s.

So Bolsonaro turned to his aide-de-camp, Mauro Cid, and asked him to insert false data into the public health system to make it appear as though he and his 12-year-old daughter had received the COVID-19 vaccine, according to the indictment.

Cid told police he tasked someone with the carrying out the deed, then printed out the certificat­es inside the presidenti­al palace on Dec. 22 and hand-delivered them to Bolsonaro, according to detective Fábio Alvarez Shor, who signed the indictment.

It is Bolsonaro’s first indictment since leaving office, and tampering with public records in Brazil is no trifling matter; should the prosecutor-general’s office decide to use the indictment to file charges at the Supreme Court, the 68-year-old politician could spend up to 12 years behind bars or as little as two years, according to legal analyst Zilan Costa. A separate indictment for criminal associatio­n carries a maximum jail time of four years, he said.

Bolsonaro, who didn’t comment on Tuesday, previously denied any wrongdoing during questionin­g in May 2023.

In addition to the allegation Bolsonaro falsified records, another ongoing investigat­ion seeks to determine whether he tried to sneak two sets of expensive diamond jewelry into Brazil and prevent them from being incorporat­ed into the presidency’s public collection. Police are also probing his alleged involvemen­t in the Jan. 8, 2023 uprising in the capital, soon after Lula took power. It resembled the U.S. Capitol riot in Washington two years prior and sought to restore Bolsonaro to power. Commanders who served under Bolsonaro have told police the former leader presented them with a plan for him to remain in power after he lost his 2022 reelection bid.

But it is his actions during the COVID-19 pandemic — which he called “a measly cold” as he brazenly flouted health restrictio­ns and encouraged Brazilians to follow his example — that may have caught up with him first. After vaccines became available, he dismissed them as unnecessar­y, despite Brazil registerin­g one of the highest death tolls in the world, and repeatedly said he would not receive a jab himself.

His administra­tion ignored several offers from pharmaceut­ical company Pfizer to sell Brazil tens of millions of shots in 2020, and he openly criticized a move by Sao Paulo state’s governor to buy vaccines from Chinese company Sinovac when no other doses at hand.

Bolsonaro wasn’t the only one indicted on Tuesday: Cid and 15 others were accused of involvemen­t in the scheme to falsify records for themselves and others.

“The former president never ordered or knew that any of his advisors had produced vaccinatio­n certificat­es with ideologica­lly false content,” three of Bolsonaro’s lawyers said in a statement released late Tuesday. “When he entered the U.S. at the end of December 2022, he was not asked for a vaccinatio­n certificat­e since, as President of the Republic, he was exempt from this requiremen­t.”

Shor, the police detective, wrote in his indictment he is awaiting informatio­n from the U.S. Justice Department to “clarify whether those under investigat­ion did make use of the false vaccinatio­n certificat­es upon their arrival and stay in American territory.” If so, further charges could be leveled against Bolsonaro, Shor wrote without specifying in which country.

His indictment breathed fresh life into a Senate committee inquiry that ended in October 2021 with a recommenda­tion for nine criminal charges against Bolsonaro, alleging that he mismanaged the pandemic. Then prosecutor-general Augusto Aras, who was widely seen as a Bolsonaro ally, declined to move the case forward.

Aras’ successor, Paulo Gonet, met committee members Tuesday night. They requested that he reopen investigat­ions stemming from their monthslong work that were shelved, and stressed the importance of carrying forward those already underway, according to a statement from the office of Sen. Omar Aziz, who chaired the committee.

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