Brazil Supreme Court justice suspends bill that ordered early release of ex-president Bolsonaro

Congress last month overturned President Luiz Inacio Lula ‌da Silva's veto of the bill, but the plaintiffs asked Brazil's top court to overturn it, saying the bill was unconstitutional. Approved last year, the bill would cut Bolsonaro's prison term ⁠to ​just over two ⁠years, lawmakers said at the time, and reduce sentences for those convicted over a January ⁠2023 riot, when Bolsonaro supporters invaded and ransacked the presidential palace, Supreme Court and ​Congress.


Reuters | Updated: 10-05-2026 00:41 IST | Created: 10-05-2026 00:41 IST
Brazil Supreme Court justice suspends bill that ordered early release of ex-president Bolsonaro

Brazil's Supreme ​Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes ​prohibited the implementation of ‌a sharp reduction ​in the 27-year prison sentence of former President Jair Bolsonaro for plotting a coup after losing ‌the 2022 election, a court document showed on Saturday.

Two Brazilian political parties and the press association ABI this week separately challenged the bill, which would have potentially ‌freed Bolsonaro in 2028. Congress last month overturned President Luiz Inacio Lula ‌da Silva's veto of the bill, but the plaintiffs asked Brazil's top court to overturn it, saying the bill was unconstitutional.

Approved last year, the bill would cut Bolsonaro's prison term ⁠to ​just over two ⁠years, lawmakers said at the time, and reduce sentences for those convicted over a January ⁠2023 riot, when Bolsonaro supporters invaded and ransacked the presidential palace, Supreme Court and ​Congress. Moraes ruled the bill should not be implemented until Brazil's top court ⁠concludes work in two judicial proceedings in which plaintiffs requested nullification of the measure, which they ⁠called ​unconstitutional.

Bolsonaro's lawyers have yet to formally request that the court consider a reduction of the right-wing leader's prison term due to the bill. ⁠On Friday, they filed a motion for criminal review with the Supreme Court ⁠to overturn the ⁠sentence. The former president has been serving his sentence under humanitarian house arrest following an initial 90-day regime authorized on ‌medical grounds.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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