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Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
Mon Jun 5, 2017, 01:58 AM Jun 2017

Operation Car Wash: Is this the biggest corruption scandal in history?


What began as an investigation into money laundering quickly turned into something much greater, uncovering a vast and intricate web of political and corporate racketeering. By Jonathan Watts



On 14 January 2015, police agent Newton Ishii was waiting in Rio de Janeiro’s Galeão airport to meet the midnight flight from London. His mission was simple. A former executive of Brazil’s national oil company, Petrobras, was on the plane. Ishii was to arrest him as soon as he set foot in Brazil and take him for questioning by detectives.

No big deal, the veteran cop thought as he ticked off the hours in the shabby Terminal One lounge. This was just one of many anti-bribery operations he had worked on. Usually they made a few headlines, then faded away, leaving the perpetrators to carry on as if nothing had happened. There was a popular expression for this: acabou em pizza (to end up with pizza), which suggested that there was no political row that could not be settled over a meal and a few beers.

When the plane finally landed, Ishii’s target was easy to identify among the passengers in the arrivals hall. Nestor Cerveró has a strikingly asymmetrical face, with his left eye set lower than the right. “He couldn’t believe it. He said I had made a mistake,” Ishii recalled later. “I told him I was just doing my job and that he could take up his complaints with the judge.”

Cerveró called his brother and a lawyer. He expected to be free before morning. Ishii, too, had few illusions that his suspect would be locked up for long. Decades on the force had taught him how quickly the rich and powerful could wriggle off the hook. There was little reason to think this case would be any different.

More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/jun/01/brazil-operation-car-wash-is-this-the-biggest-corruption-scandal-in-history

Editorials and other articles:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/1016186538
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Operation Car Wash: Is this the biggest corruption scandal in history? (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jun 2017 OP
And that's why they had to get rid of Rousseff Warpy Jun 2017 #1
Without a doubt they believed they were all home free. Judi Lynn Jun 2017 #2

Warpy

(111,279 posts)
1. And that's why they had to get rid of Rousseff
Mon Jun 5, 2017, 02:23 AM
Jun 2017

Millionaires and politicians were going to prison.

I just hope it's contagious. I also hope they get rid of the illegal Temer and his whole gang.

Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
2. Without a doubt they believed they were all home free.
Mon Jun 5, 2017, 10:51 PM
Jun 2017

When the Congress actually had right-wing pig members standing and dedicating their vote to the man who handled Rousseff's torture during her long ordeal in prison, during which time other prisoners said she was courageous, held her own, didn't break. How degenerate does a person have to be to publicly praise the fact Rousseff, a rebel, was kidnapped by the military dictatorship, imprisoned, and tortured relentlessly?



Photo of Dilma Rousseff sitting in the military court. Hard to miss the fact the miltary judges are
hiding their evil faces from the photographer, and Dilma most surely is not!

Anyone in his right mind knows instinctively that a woman who sacrificed so much of her life, her
safety, her well-being against the fascist would NEVER be a President who would line her pockets
with the people's tax money.

Viva Dilma.



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