Brazil's Senate Foreign Relations Committee has approved an official mission to the United States to oversee asylum requests by Brazilians, with a focus on former deputy Alexandre Ramagem's case following his brief ICE detention. The move, requested by Senator Jorge Seif, aims to verify consular support and US immigration practices amid Brazil's extradition push.
The Senate Foreign Relations Committee, chaired by Hamilton Mourão (Republicanos-RS), approved on Thursday (16) a mission to Orlando and Washington D.C., proposed by Senator Jorge Seif (PL-SC). Objectives include assessing consular assistance for Brazilians, reviewing the Brazil-US Extradition Treaty, and visiting ICE facilities—directly tied to Ramagem's recent ordeal.
As detailed in prior coverage (see: 'Ramagem, Brazilian fugitive wanted for coup plot, detained by US ICE in Orlando' and 'Former deputy Ramagem released from US detention over migration issues'), Ramagem—sentenced to over 16 years for a coup attempt and cassated as deputy—was detained by ICE in Orlando on April 13 over an expired visa but released two days later without bail due to his pending asylum request. He fled Brazil clandestinely via Guyana in 2025 amid his trial.
In a video post-release, Ramagem thanked Trump administration officials, affirmed his regular US status via valid entry and asylum process, and criticized Brazil's Federal Police director-general Andrei Rodrigues. Ally Eduardo Bolsonaro (PL-SP) echoed support, stating Ramagem's status is legal pending asylum approval.
The mission reflects escalating political tensions, with Ramagem's supporters viewing his US stay favorably and opponents, including President Lula, demanding his return to serve his sentence.