TeleSUR.
August 19, 2019
New private messages exchanged between the Lava Jato (Car Wash) prosecutors involved in the judicial case against former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva were published Monday by his defense attorney, giving more evidence that the leader of the Workers Party was "victim of a conspiracy."
"The messages are directly related with the two clearly corrupted procedures that were initiated in the Federal Court of Curitiba (the Triplex and Sitio case) and inflicted unfair sentenced to Lula," said his lawyers Valeska Texeira Martins and Cristiano Zanin Martins in a press release.
The then-judge Sergio Moro,
now Super Minister of Justice, admitted that Lula received no funds from the
construction company Odebrecht, still the corruption case known as Lava Jato,
"did not take into account the evidence of his testimony that we brought
to the procedure," they added.
As a result, the lawyers
announced that they will send the case to the Committee of Human Rights of the
United Nations in order to annul the sentences against Lula and to open an
investigation about the role of the public officials involved in the
conversations.
The historical leader of the
Brazilian left has been in prison since April 7, 2018, over corruption charges
that media leaks and legal experts have exposed as politically motivated.
Lula ran for president last
year but was blocked from appearing on the ballot by Moro, which was upheld on
appeal. Lula led opinion polls heading into the election, which was won by
far-right candidate Jair Bolsonaro.
Some excerpted conversations
published showed prosecutors discussing how to block journalists from
interviewing Lula in jail during last year's campaign. A message attributed to
one of the prosecutors, Laura Tessler, suggested that such an interview could
help Lula's stand-in on the Workers Party ticket.
On June 25, Brazil's Supreme
Federal Court rejected two appeals that attempted to grant freedom to the former
president. The third motion, which was the Habeas Corpus hearing initiated on
December 2018, was suspended once again and rescheduled for this year’s second
semester.
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