Pubdate: Tue, 29 Feb 2000 Source: Washington Post (DC) Section: Front page Copyright: 2000 The Washington Post Company Address: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071 Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Author: Stephen Buckley, Washington Post Foreign Service IN BRAZIL, STATE POLICE ARE A KILLING FORCE RIO BRANCO, Brazil - The bodies have turned up one or two at a time, in ditches and tall grass on the edge of town. Most of the dead have been thieves and drug dealers, who in many cases across Brazil were tortured for hours or mutilated - a hand or arm chopped off - before being shot in the head at close range. State civil police investigated the cases, and rarely arrested anyone. Now, federal police and human rights activists say they know why: The civil and military police were themselves the killers. Earlier this month, one human rights group reported that civil and military police in Latin America's most populous nation had participated in 2,500 killings since 1997, a figure that some activists and federal law enforcement officials say is a conservative estimate. In Acre, one of the most violent states in Brazil, federal officials estimate that police have killed 500 people since 1997. In the state of Goias, in a cluster of poor towns around the nation's capital, Brasilia, authorities believe police have executed more than 100 people during the same time period. In the northeast state of Bahia, police are said to have killed some 160 residents since 1997. And those figures are just from three of Brazil's 26 states. Over the past six months, some 50 police officers have been arrested in connection with slayings in their states. In the most notorious case, 42 Acre police officers are accused of participating in an extensive and vicious organized crime ring that operated out of Rio Branco, the state capital. The ring's leader allegedly was Hildebrando Pascoal, a national congressman and military police colonel, who was arrested last September. He has denied wrongdoing. The cases have drawn new attention to an old problem in Brazil - corrupt and deadly police preying on poor communities, these days often in consort with politicians and merchants who use officers as neighborhood vigilantes and as enforcers in drug trafficking networks. Human rights activists see the cases as evidence that the Brazilian government has done little to curb the civil and military police since off-duty officers killed eight street children in Rio de Janiero in 1993, an incident that ignited international outrage. "What has happened is that the police are under nobody's control," said Nelson Pellegrino, a member of the Brazilian legislature's human rights commission. "They operate freely. So of course they become involved in crimes." In virtually all of the recently discovered incidents, civil and military police officers have preyed on towns where unemployment is high and education levels low. Residents often live without basic services such as indoor plumbing and must endure dilapidated schools and poor medical facilities. They are often powerless to resist the police. And it does not help that the police typically are ill-trained, poorly educated and among Brazil's lowest-paid public servants. "When you give someone like this a badge and a gun, suddenly he feels like a very powerful person," said Jim Cavallaro, a veteran human rights activist here. Numerous cities have been burdened with rogue police for years. In states such as Rio Grande do Norte, for example, a group known as the Golden Boys, and its branches, allegedly have killed dozens of people since the early 1980s. Over the years Acre, the country's westernmost state, has become synonymous with police lawlessness. Its crippled rubber industry, its location on Brazil's border with Peru and Bolivia and its vast stretches of jungle have made it an ideal place for corruption to flourish. For much of its history, it was known mainly for its rubber tappers, the most famous of whom is slain activist Chico Mendes. Throughout the 1980s, the industry continued its decades-long decline, leaving Acre among the country's most economically depressed states. At the same time, Acre grew increasingly violent, with civil police in particular connected to numerous killings, often ordered by crime-weary merchants or by landowners in property battles with rubber tappers. By the 1990s, drug trafficking had become a potent industry in Acre. The state, with close to a half-million residents, had become a prime transport route for cocaine moving from Peru and Bolivia to Colombia, as poorly-watched borders and thick pockets of jungle allowed traffickers to carve out secret roads and landing strips. As drug trafficking grew, so did the piles of bodies on the outskirts of Rio Branco. Typically, the victims were young working-class men, some of them criminals. In general, according to prosecutors and human rights activists, police received the equivalent of $1,000 or more for each killing. Here in Acre, where police have not had raises in at least five years, the average officer makes about $300 a month. Civil police, who perform investigations, tend to be paid slightly less than military police, who patrol communities. There is ample evidence, prosecutors say, that the police were ordered to make their killings as brutal as possible. Sometimes victims had been stabbed or shot repeatedly; one young man, now a prosecution witness, was hit with 18 bullets and survived. On other occasions, police sawed off, or hacked off, victims' fingers or arms or hands. Occasionally they decapitated them. In one case, Antonio Carlos Moura, 23, went missing in June 1996, shortly after police arrested him in connection with the fatal stabbing of his neighbor, a female school teacher. Moura, who washed cars for a living, denied killing her. But police said at the time that a bloody T-shirt found in his home indicated otherwise. Weeks later, Moura's headless body surfaced. He apparently had been dragged along the ground by a car. His hands reportedly had been hacked off, his tattoos scraped away. His head was found a few days later in a roadside ditch in Rio Branco. Authorities now say that Moura was innocent. They believe that military police killed the teacher because she had threatened to report that traffickers were recruiting children at her school to sell drugs. "We knew he was innocent, so in that sense there has been justice," said Moura's brother, Francisco da Silva Moura, 32. But "my mother is still really scared. She's afraid that the same people who did that to her son will do the same thing to her. They can kill anyone." Prosecutors and public security officials believe Francisco Moura and the citizens of Acre can breathe a bit easier these days, with the arrest of Pascoal and the military police officers. They admit, however, that it will be difficult to convict Pascoal because the trial is being held in Rio Branco, where many still fear him and his family. Already, one prosecution witness has recanted his testimony. Pascoal's attorney, Oscar Luchesi, said that the government "has no proof that Hildebrando did anything wrong" and said political enemies are behind the prosecution of his client, who was expelled by the Brazilian Congress last October. Naluh Gouveia, a state legislator and founder of the Committee Against Impunity, said that the cases are critical for restoring the people's confidence in the justice system. A committee survey found that only 32 percent of respondents have faith in the state's police and courts. Salete Maia, now Acre's secretary of public security, said the state is attempting to overhaul its military and civil police forces. She said that Acre is establishing new training standards - she said that many officers cannot read - and police will receive raises next year. Francisco Moura says the arrests are a good first step, but not enough. "If someone kills, they must be put into prison," Moura said. "We have to act according to the law. The law can't favor the rich over the poor, like they have been doing. Everybody is equal. Everybody is a human being." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D