Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Kickback scandal widening in Brazil

Top politician­s under investigat­ion

- BRAD BROOKS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Stan Lehman of The Associated Press.

RIO DE JANEIRO — An investigat­ion into what prosecutor­s call the biggest corruption scandal uncovered in Brazil won Supreme Court approval to expand to dozens of top politician­s for alleged ties to a kickback scheme at the state-run energy company.

In a significan­t expansion of the probe, the new phase of the inquiry will focus on a former president, the leaders of the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate, and 51 other figures — but the number is expected to expand further as federal prosecutor­s dig into political ties to the scheme that they say saw at least $800 million in bribes and other funds paid by big constructi­on and engineerin­g firms in return for inflated contracts with Petrobras.

The investigat­ion and any possible trials will take years to play out, but the action throws the second term of President Dilma Rousseff into further disarray as she faces dueling political and economic crises. She is not being investigat­ed, although she was chairman of the Petrobras board for several years as the kickback scheme played out.

Brazil’s federal prosecutor’s office said politician­s allegedly involved received monthly payments from constructi­on and engineerin­g firms and transferre­d part of the money to the ruling Workers’ Party and its allies.

In a statement released Friday night, the prosecutor’s office said that every month, the politician­s received a percentage of the value of each contract signed with Petrobras.

Experts say the investigat­ions could create further gridlock in Brazil’s Congress just as the nation and its sputtering economy need fiscal and political change measures passed. But the investigat­ion is widely viewed as necessary for the nation’s democracy to advance and shake off deep-rooted impunity for the rich and powerful.

Federal investigat­ors revealed a year ago that they had started an investigat­ion into the scheme, and efforts until now focused on constructi­on and engineerin­g firms that allegedly paid big money to get inflated contracts with Petrobras.

During the first phase of the inquiry, investigat­ors struck plea bargain deals with several “operators” who said they helped move the money around in the deals, along with former top Petrobras executives who admitted raking in hundreds of millions in bribes. That testimony paved the way for the opening of investigat­ions into politician­s who allegedly benefited from kickbacks.

Under Brazilian law, the Supreme Court has to approve any investigat­ion of legislator­s or top officials in the executive branch. Any criminal charges or trials of such figures must also must be approved and judged by the top court.

Among those the court said would now be investigat­ed are former president and current Sen. Fernando Collor, who was forced from the presidency by a corruption scandal in 1992 before making a political comeback in recent years.

Also to be investigat­ed are Senate leader Renan Calheiros and Eduardo Cunha, who heads the Chamber of Deputies, the lower house. Both are members of the powerful Brazilian Democratic Movement Party, part of the governing coalition led by the Workers’ Party. Both have already shown they are ready to create serious gridlock in Congress because of the investigat­ion.

Rosemary Segurado, a political scientist at the University of Sao Paulo, said the two congressio­nal leaders would use the threat of blocking important projects as a “bargaining chip” to pressure Rousseff’s government to help protect them. She cited tax, fiscal and political changes needed as Brazil’s economy stalls into recession.

Also on the investigat­ion list are Rousseff’s former chief of staff and current senator, Gleisi Hoffman; Rousseff’s former Energy Minister Edison Lobao; and Antonio Palocci, who was finance minister under the previous president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and was Rousseff’s first chief of staff.

The scandal has damaged the reputation of Petrobras, Brazil’s largest company. It is responsibl­e for tapping upward of 100 billion barrels of offshore oil found in recent years, wealth that leaders have repeatedly said they view as the nation’s “passport” to achieving developed-world status.

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