Brazilian President Lula presenting the anti-faction bill in response to a deadly Rio police operation, with Congress and city elements in the background.
Brazilian President Lula presenting the anti-faction bill in response to a deadly Rio police operation, with Congress and city elements in the background.
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Lula sends anti-faction bill to Congress after Rio operation

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President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva sent the anti-faction bill to Congress on Friday (31), accelerated in response to a major police operation in Rio de Janeiro that resulted in 121 deaths. The proposal toughens penalties against organized crime and creates mechanisms to financially combat factions. Experts debate whether the text represents progress or repeats ineffective punitive formulas.

On Friday, October 31, 2025, President Lula signed and sent the Anti-Faction Bill to the Chamber of Deputies, drafted by the Ministry of Justice under Ricardo Lewandowski. The measure was spurred by Operation Contenção, conducted on Tuesday (28) in the Penha and Alemão complexes in Rio de Janeiro, targeting the Comando Vermelho faction. The operation, the deadliest in the state's history, killed 121 people identified as suspects and injured 13 police officers, with four agent deaths: two from the Military Police and two civilians, including delegate Marcus Vinícius Cardoso de Carvalho and inspector Rodrigo Velloso Cabral.

Lula announced the initiative on social media: "I am signing here to send a bill with utmost urgency to the National Congress, which is an anti-faction bill. We will show how to confront factions in this country, how to confront organized crime, how to confront those who live off the exploitation of the humblest people in this country." The text creates the penal type of "qualified criminal organization," with sentences of 8 to 15 years, rising to 30 years in homicide cases, and deems it heinous. Other provisions include increasing penalties for simple criminal organization from 3-8 to 5-10 years, with aggravating factors like minor involvement or public sector infiltration; asset seizure without conviction; police infiltration using fictitious companies; creation of the National Bank of Criminal Organizations; and a 14-year ban on public contracts for convicts.

The proposal, sent to the Planalto on October 22, faces resistance in Congress. Senator Sergio Moro criticized points that weaken crime-fighting, while Deputy Paulo Bilynskyj highlighted omissions in custody hearings and sentence progression. Right-wing governors, such as Cláudio Castro (RJ), Romeu Zema (MG), and Ronaldo Caiado (GO), met to support the state operation amid political clashes.

In Folha debates, USP professor Gabriel Feltran sees potential to extend focus to business elites linked to factions, drawing from Italy's anti-mafia experience, but warns of punitive risks exacerbating inequalities. Prosecutor Roberto Dávila argues the bill ignores the root issue – drug trafficking – and that infiltrations are unfeasible in Brazil, offering no real innovation beyond routine measures like parley monitoring.

A Veja-cited survey shows public approval of Rio police operations. The government also pushes the Security PEC, progressing slowly, to unify national guidelines.

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President Lula delivering a speech at the Fiocruz center inauguration in Rio de Janeiro, urging action against militiamen.
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Lula demands arrest of militiamen in Rio speech

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President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on Saturday urged Rio de Janeiro interim governor Ricardo Couto to arrest thieves and militiamen who ran the state. The remarks came during the inauguration of a Fiocruz center.

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva enacted the Anti-Faction Bill, now the Raul Jungmann Law, on Tuesday (24) with vetoes to provisions punishing independent agents for grave faction-like acts and allocating seized assets to states. The law introduces new offenses against ultraviolent criminal organizations, featuring harsh penalties and restrictions on prison benefits.

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Brazil's Chamber of Deputies approved the Anti-Faction Bill (PL 5582/25) on the night of February 24, toughening penalties against criminal organizations and militias. Authored by the executive branch, the bill now heads to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva for sanction after Senate amendments. The symbolic vote removed the proposed taxation on online bets.

A Genial/Quaest poll released Sunday shows 52% of Brazilians oppose reducing sentences for those involved in the January 8 attacks, including former President Jair Bolsonaro.

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In a follow-up to last week's CPMI approval and STF authorization, Senate President Davi Alcolumbre rejected a PT appeal on March 3, upholding the bank and fiscal secrecy break for Fábio Luís Lula da Silva (Lulinha), son of President Lula. New details emerge of a Portugal trip paid by imprisoned lobbyist Careca do INSS, alongside bribery suspicions, though Lulinha denies involvement.

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