BFF-03 Brazil court reduces ex-president Lula’s sentence

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BFF-03

BRAZIL-COURT-POLITICS

Brazil court reduces ex-president Lula’s sentence

BRASILIA, April 24, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – A Brazilian appeals court on Tuesday
reduced leftist former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s 12-year sentence
for bribery and money laundering.

In a unanimous decision, the four judges on the Superior Court of Justice
panel hearing Lula’s appeal agreed to uphold his conviction, but cut the
sentence to eight years and 10 months.

The ruling, broadcast live on the court’s YouTube channel, could mean Lula
is eligible for “semi-open” prison later this year.

The 73-year-old leftist icon, who has been sentenced to 25 years behind
bars in two separate corruption cases, marked his first year in jail earlier
this month.

The judges also reduced fines imposed on the former president from 29
million reais ($7.4 million) to 2.4 million ($615,000), the estimated price
of the triplex.

They also reduced a fine of 175 days — where each “day” demands a payment
of five times the minimum wage — to 50.

Lula was originally sentenced to nine and a half years on charges that he
accepted a seaside apartment as a bribe for helping the OAS construction
company during his 2003-2010 presidency to get lucrative deals with state oil
firm Petrobras.

That was increased by an appeals court in January 2018 — a decision the
Superior Court of Justice panel ruled Tuesday was “excessive.”

Lula’s legal team said the decision was “too little but it’s a start,” and
said it would appeal, seeking a total acquittal.

“The only result we see as compatible with this specific case is the
acquittal of former president Lula because we understand… that he did not
commit any crime,” said one of his lawyers, Cristiano Zanin.

Lula is also appealing the second sentence of almost 13 years handed down
in February for accepting renovation work by two construction companies on a
farmhouse in exchange for ensuring they won contracts with Petrobras.

He has denied all the charges against him, arguing they were politically
motivated with the aim of preventing him competing in elections last year
that were won by Brazil’s new far-right President Jair Bolsonaro.

During his election campaign, Bolsonaro said he hoped Lula would “rot in
prison.”

– ‘Lula is innocent’ –

Lula has been allowed to leave jail twice in the past 12 months, once for
the funeral of his seven-year-old grandson and another time to give evidence
in court.

Under Brazilian law a prisoner is eligible for a “semi-open” prison regime
after completing one-sixth of the sentence.

Tuesday’s decision means Lula could qualify for the more lenient
arrangement from September or October, legal experts said.

That would enable Lula to sleep in his cell at night but work outside
during the day, law professor Lenio Streck told AFP.

But that depends on the outcome of Lula’s appeals in the second conviction.

Lula’s efforts to get out of jail were dealt a blow recently when the
Supreme Court indefinitely delayed debate on whether a prisoner convicted of
a non-violent crime should be released before the end of the appeals process,
which could have potentially freed him.

Bolsonaro’s victory in October’s elections ended decades of center-left
rule in Brazil and reduced Lula’s chances of freedom.

Soon after winning, Bolsonaro named Sergio Moro, the anticorruption judge
who handed Lula his first conviction, as justice minister.

“Lula is innocent, he deserves to be acquitted, but the votes for the
reduction of his sentence show the level of persecution and arbitrariness to
which Lula was subjected by Moro,” tweeted Workers Party president Gleisi
Hoffmann.

BSS/AFP/GMR/0813 hrs