tetracampeão da Américaᶜʳᶠ
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Exile Denied: When “Justice” Follows You Across Borders So much for exile. Former deputy Alexandre Ramagem, having left Brazil in search of refuge in the United States, has now been arrested by ICE. The Federal Police confirm the detention of the parliamentarian, sentenced to 16 years over an alleged coup attempt. One might have thought distance offers a pause. Apparently, it offers a handover. From Political Opponent to International Target What begins in Brasília no longer stays in Brasília. Under the ever-expanding reach of Alexandre de Moraes’ judicial campaign, political cases have developed a rather global flavour. First comes the investigation, then the charges, then the conviction—and now, quite efficiently, the international follow-through. All very procedural, of course. The Convenience of Cooperation There is something almost impressive about the coordination. A man leaves his country seeking protection, only to be detained abroad under the same shadow that pushed him out. Legal frameworks align, authorities cooperate, and suddenly “exile” looks less like refuge and more like a delayed checkpoint. Coincidence, no doubt. Justice or Message? The official explanation remains unchanged: democracy defended, institutions protected. But the message is clearer than any legal statement: Opposition is not merely defeated—it is pursued. Across courts. Across borders. Across time. Conclusion: Nowhere Left to Go For those on the wrong side of Brazil’s current judicial order, the lesson is simple. Leaving is no escape. Because in this new era, justice does not just knock on your door— It already knows where you’re going.


























