Realistic illustration of Brazilian Supreme Court Minister Alexandre de Moraes suspending the Dosimetry Law in front of the STF building.
Realistic illustration of Brazilian Supreme Court Minister Alexandre de Moraes suspending the Dosimetry Law in front of the STF building.
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Moraes suspends dosimetry law until stf plenary decides

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Supreme Court Minister Alexandre de Moraes decided on Saturday to suspend the application of the Dosimetry Law, which reduces sentences for those convicted in the January 8 attacks. The measure awaits the Court's plenary analysis of the constitutionality of the rule promulgated by Congress on Friday. Reactions from opposition and government politicians followed quickly.

Moraes ordered that the law not be applied until the final judgment of the actions questioning its validity. The decision was recorded in the cases of at least ten people convicted for the coup acts.

Senator Flávio Bolsonaro called the move a “bureaucratic stroke of the pen” and said democracy is shaken. At an event in Florianópolis, he stated that a Supreme Court minister overrides decisions by the people’s representatives.

PSOL leader in the Chamber Tarcísio Motta said the legislation is casuistic and unconstitutional. Lawyers for defendants, such as Helio Junior, criticized the individual suspension of a law already in force.

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Initial reactions on X highlight support from left-leaning users who back Moraes' decision to prevent disguised amnesty for January 8 attackers, stressing defense of democracy. Opposition voices criticize the monocratic suspension of a congressional law as judicial overreach violating separation of powers. Neutral reports note the measure awaits full STF plenary review amid challenges from groups like PSOL and ABI. Skeptical posts question the selectivity in handling protests and call for limits on individual ministers' powers.

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Illustration of Brazilian legal proceedings at STF regarding the Dosimetry Law opposition by PGR.
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PGR opposes suspension of Dosimetry Law at STF

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The Attorney General's Office sent an opinion to the Federal Supreme Court on Thursday (18) against suspending the Dosimetry Law, which could reduce sentences for those convicted in the January 8, 2023 acts, including Jair Bolsonaro.

Supreme Court minister Alexandre de Moraes has ordered President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Senate President Davi Alcolumbre to comment on the Dosimetry Law. The rule, promulgated on Friday (8), reduces sentences for those convicted in the January 8 events and could benefit former President Jair Bolsonaro.

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Brazil's Congress overrode President Lula's veto on the Dosimetria bill on Thursday (April 30), potentially reducing sentences for those convicted of coup-related acts, including Jair Bolsonaro. Cases will be reviewed individually by the STF. The move represents the government's second consecutive loss in Congress.

Brazil's Senate rejected Attorney-General Jorge Messias's nomination to the Supreme Federal Court (STF) on Wednesday (April 29, 2026), with 42 votes against and 34 in favor. The vote marks the first rejection of a presidential nominee to the Court in 132 years, since 1894. Messias had been approved by the CCJ committee 16-11 after an eight-hour hearing.

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STF Minister André Mendonça was drawn by lot on Tuesday (7) as the rapporteur for former President Jair Bolsonaro's criminal complaint against Deputy André Janones (Rede-MG). The action accuses the lawmaker of slander, defamation, and injury over statements in a social media video. Bolsonaro has been under house arrest since March 27, by order of Alexandre de Moraes.

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