
New charges accuse Bolsonaro of running spy ring from Brazil's presidential palace
Federal police have formally accused Brazil's former far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, of presiding over an illegal spying network which allegedly snooped on political rivals, journalists and environmentalists during his administration.
Bolsonaro is already facing the prospect of jail time over his alleged role in masterminding a military coup plot designed to help him keep power after losing the 2022 election to the leftwing veteran Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. There is broad consensus among analysts that Bolsonaro's conviction is a foregone conclusion and the 70-year-old populist is expected to face arrest in the coming months once a supreme court trial concludes.
The latest accusations relate to a two-year federal police investigation into suspicions that a 'parallel' intelligence agency was set up during Bolsonaro's 2019-23 administration in order to monitor those considered government foes.
On Tuesday police accused Bolsonaro's alleged former spy chief, Alexandre Ramagem – who ran Brazil's intelligence agency, Abin, from 2019 to 2022 – of running the clandestine operation and accused more than 30 others of being involved, including the president's politician son Carlos Bolsonaro.
The news website G1 said investigators had concluded that under Bolsonaro members of Abin 'formed a criminal organization in order to monitor people and public authorities, invading mobile phones and computers'.
Some of the information gathered was allegedly provided to a covert social media team that operated within the presidential palace and allegedly used illegally collected information as ammunition to launch online attacks.
The targets reportedly included four supreme court ministers and powerful politicians including the former president of Brazil's lower house, Arthur Lira, and the then governor of São Paulo, João Doria, a prominent right-wing rival to the president.
Journalists and public servants were also reportedly spied on, including Hugo Loss, a respected member of the environmental agency, Ibama, who was on the front line of efforts to protect the Amazon at a time when illegal loggers and miners were emboldened by Bolsonaro's anti-environment rhetoric and climate denial.
Loss had worked closely with Bruno Pereira, the Indigenous expert and former government employee who was murdered in the rainforest region three years ago this month with the British journalist Dom Phillips.
The newspaper O Globo said police believed the Bolsonarista spy network was created in order 'to make it possible for Bolsonaro to remain in the presidential chair'.
Bolsonaro, his son and Ramagem made no immediate comment on the accusations but have previously denied such charges.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
Episode five: the fightback
Funerals are held for Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira and there is hope that the election of President Lula will mean new protections for the Amazon – and that the killers of Dom and Bruno will face justice. But organised crime is widespread and deep-rooted. The investigative journalist Sônia Bridi tells the Guardian's Latin America correspondent Tom Phillips about a man who allegedly not only may have helped plan the killings but may have ordered them. A man whose name strikes fear across the region


Daily Mail
9 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Jealous lawyer branded her estranged husband's new girlfriend 'scruffy' and 'trampy' and had him arrested over unfounded assault claims
A jealous lawyer hounded her estranged husband with derogatory Facebook messages and had him arrested after he began an affair with a younger woman. Susilla Mercer, 44, branded Gerard Flynn's South American girlfriend Shelina Kurz 'scruffy' and 'trampy', adding: 'Penthouse to s***house does not even cut it.' She also made unfounded allegations of assault against Mr Flynn which resulted in him being detained and quizzed by police, a court heard, only to be released without charge. In response, Mercer - who married her husband in 2020 in a lavish £60,000 wedding ceremony at Peckforton Castle in Cheshire - messaged him saying: 'I am sorry I got you arrested but I did not want to spend £200 to £300 an hour on a water tight divorce. 'The copper then took it out of my hands and I spent the time with two barristers trying to get you out to make sure that the CPS did not take it further.' She continued to berate his girlfriend on social media, cruelly branding her 'ugly'. Mercer also posted a picture of Ms Kurz with the caption: 'F*** me. Her forehead is so big you could draw a picture on it. 'She looks like she has just got out of bed.' In a statement Mr Flynn, who is believed to work in construction, said he suffered from constant anxiety which prevented him from leaving the house out of fear he would be arrested again. He said because of his large build and the fact he is male, he did not think anyone would believe him. Mr Flynn, 42, added: 'My mental health declined rapidly and my friend had to pick me otherwise I would not go to work. 'If it was not for the antidepressants I would not be where I am today.' In her own victim statement, Ms Kurz - who is in her 30s - said: 'It is not a nice feeling to hear bad things said about yourself online, especially when they do not know you. 'It made me believe that the constant messages and phone calls would never stop. 'It all affected my relationship with Gerard massively. 'It was always in the back of my mind if she would show up.' Mercer's Runcorn-based firm Mercer Law was shut down in 2023 following a probe into allegations of dishonesty by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. At Warrington magistrates court she was sentenced to 12 weeks in jail suspended for 12 months. Mercer had denied harassment of her husband and the racially aggravated harassment of Ms Kurz between January 2023 and July 2024. But she failed to attend her trial and was convicted in her absence. In the run-up to the hearing she posted pictures on Facebook of her wedding invitations with the caption: 'What a waste of £60,000. Cheating lying f****r.' When she attended her sentencing hearing, she said she was still 'technically' Flynn as her divorce 'had not gone through'. She was rebuked by JPs after laughing from the dock and saying: 'It is because he has an affair.' Kassem Noureddine, prosecuting, said Mr Flynn's account was that he and Mercer separated in 2022 'as a result of her alcoholism'. From the start of 2023 he began receiving 'rambling voice notes' from her, Mr Noureddine said. Following his arrest, Mercer made 'derogatory comments' about him and his new partner, he added. In mitigation Sarah Bailey said her client's conduct followed an 'acrimonious divorce' and a 'new partner' being introduced. There are also 'concerns about her mental health', she added. Mercer continued to claim Mr Flynn had assaulted her 'but there was not enough evidence to convict and she is quite upset that nothing was done about that,' she added. 'She is here for what she says is just a couple of Facebook messages.' Mercer was also banned from contacting the couple for 12 months under the terms of a restraining order and ordered to pay £804 in costs and a victim surcharge.


The Guardian
20 hours ago
- The Guardian
Hyper-realistic baby dolls spark moral panic and legislation in Brazil
Even as a former president stands trial for attempting a coup and the current leader grapples with the worst popularity crisis of his three terms, many Brazilians have spent recent weeks focused on a very different subject. On social media, in soap operas, and in newly proposed laws, it seemed that hyper-realistic baby dolls were everywhere. About 30 bills concerning these figurines, known as 'reborn' dolls, have been introduced across Brazil, including proposals to ban them from receiving public healthcare or to prohibit collectors from using them to claim priority in queues for public services. Videos of collectors bathing their dolls, tucking them into bed or pushing them in prams spread widely across social media – often accompanied by critical commentary or ridicule, such as a satirical rap song encouraging people to kick the dolls in the street. The controversy reached a disturbing peak on 6 June, when a man slapped a four-month-old baby on the head, claiming he had mistaken the infant for one of the dolls. He is out on bail, and the baby is reportedly doing well. 'I can't recall any other issue that, in such a short period, managed to spark so many bills across different levels of government like this,' said Isabela Kalil, a political science and anthropology professor at the FESPSP university. However, a closer look reveals that the laws are banning things that, in practice, are not happening: so far there has been only one confirmed case of someone attempting to take a doll to a public hospital, reportedly involving a woman with a psychiatric disorder. The wave of controversy appears to have been ridden by politicians on the right: according to the news website UOL, all bills presented in May concerning reborn dolls were proposed by rightwing and far-right lawmakers. 'If a topic is trending, these politicians will propose laws about it even if they make no sense,' said Kalil, who also coordinates a research group about the Brazilian far right. She highlights the timing: the country's leading far-right figure, former president Jair Bolsonaro, is now on trial for an attempted coup and, after a prior ruling by the electoral court, is already barred from standing in next year's elections. 'So there is also an element of grabbing attention and pushing an agenda, especially when the right wing camp is in crisis over Bolsonaro's trial and no one knows who will emerge as their new leader,' she said. Kalil notes that, although the right is politically benefiting from the controversy, criticism and mockery on social media have come from all sides, including the left. Ultimately, the victims are the women who make up the majority of collectors, artisans and content creators on the subject. 'I'm receiving daily threats through social media,' said artist and collector Larissa Vedolin, 25, who uses the artistic name Emily Reborn online. 'I get messages from anonymous accounts saying things like: 'I can't wait to get a gun and find you on the street',' she added. The 'reborn community' has been trying to understand why such an intense backlash has emerged against a type of collecting that has existed in Brazil since at least the early 2000s. There is a degree of consensus that the recent wave began with a TikTok video posted by a collector who said she had been called 'crazy' for taking one of her dolls to the shopping centre. Shortly after, another video went viral showing a doll being 'treated' at a hospital. The collector later explained it was a role play, but that did not stop widespread reposts portraying it as real. Artist and collector Bianca Miranda, 27, says that in the 14 years she has been immersed in the reborn world, she has never encountered anyone who treats the dolls as actual children. 'I have always known they were dolls and have always treated them as such, and today I understand the amount of love and work involved in making one.' Completing one, which costs anywhere from £200 to £2,500, can take weeks depending on its complexity – for instance, whether the hair is painted or implanted strand by strand. 'The first reaction of the average internet user these days is to find something to shout at,' said YouTuber Chico Barney, who filmed a collectors' gathering in São Paulo for his documentary Reborn Babies Don't Cry. 'We went there with open minds to see what happens at a reborn doll event … When we arrived, I was surprised by how un-eccentric it all was. It was just a bunch of people exchanging ideas about something they enjoy,' he said. For Kalil, an anthropologist, the controversy also reveals an element of pathologising women, as if owning or playing with hyper-realistic dolls were a sign of mental illness. 'Adult men can collect action figures or play video games without raising eyebrows. But adult women are not allowed the luxury of entertainment,' she said. The artist Vedolin argues that the dolls 'are not toys, but works of art'. However, practising it has taken on bitter elements that artists were not used. 'I know artists who have been crying all day because they can't bear to open their social media and be insulted on every video and photo they post. And to me, this reaction boils down to hate – people just want something to hate,' she said.