Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Copyright: 1998 Chicago Tribune Company Pubdate: Tue, 1 Dec 1998 Author: Laurie Goering Section: Sec. 1 BRAZIL'S JUSTICE FALLS SHORT AGAIN RIO DE JANEIRO -- When the judge announced the verdict just after midnight--acquitting all 10 former police officers charged in a slum massacre--the defendants fell to their knees cheering and then joyously lifted their black-robed lawyer onto their shoulders. Shocked with disbelief, family members of the 21 victims simply turned and walked away. "I thought that one or another could be absolved, but not all of them," said Rita da Silva, the widow of one of the victims. Five years after hooded off-duty police massacred 21 residents of Vigario Geral, one of Rio's most violent slums, Brazil's justice system is, its critics say, earning the country another international black eye. Over half a decade, the system has failed to adequately punish off-duty police involved in a series of massacres, including the infamous murder of eight "streetchildren" near Candelaria Church in 1993, human-rights advocates say. Murderers are rarely tried in Brazil--just 8 percent of cases ever reach the courtroom, police figures show--justice is slow, and while convictions often bring showy sentences in the hundreds of years, little time is served. Saturday's verdict, in one of the most bitter cases in recent years, brought only more confusion and disappointment. "This acquittal certainly leaves lots of frustration in the air," said Rubem Cesar Fernandes, coordinator of Viva Rio, a civic anti-violence group. "The overall expectation was they would be found guilty. People feel justice has not been done." On Aug. 19, 1993, according to prosecution testimony, the 10 defendants and other off-duty police entered Vigario Geral to avenge the ambush murders of four police by drug dealers in the sprawling slum. The hooded gunmen sprayed gunfire into the home of an evangelical Christian family, killing 8 of 10 adults, then threw a grenade into a bar and shot seven patrons. Altogether, 21 people died, including two children. Fifty-two police were charged in the murders, but only two have been convicted. They received sentences of more than 400 years each. Under Brazilian law, the maximum penalty for any crime is 30 years and retrials are automatic for sentences of more than 19 years. Several police convicted in the Candelaria killings and sentenced to hundreds of years are expected to serve less than 10 in police barracks rather than prison. "We sink lower all the time in Brazil. There's shameless impunity," said Cristina Leonardo, a lawyer for the families of the Vigario Geral victims. "This wasn't just Vigario that lost. This was a societal loss against organized crime." Because court action against criminals in Brazil is slow and inconsistent, most people favor street justice by police, including executions of criminals caught in the act. Attempted bank robbers in Rio's posh seaside Ipanema district recently were fatally shot in the middle of a crowded city street. Newspapers for days carried photographs of families shaking the hands of the military police gunman. Persistent crime has led to broad middle-class acceptance of police brutality against perceived criminals, including many of the city's millions of slum dwellers. In the Vigario Geral trial, defense attorneys presented carefully edited jailhouse tapes in which other inmates suggested the 10 were uninvolved in the massacre. Prosecutors dismissed the tapes as an editing-table fabrication, but jurors apparently found them believable. Prosecutors over five days presented voluminous evidence linking bullet fragments to police weapons, but the exhausted jury--trials go nearly round-the-clock in Brazil--reportedly was overwhelmed and confused by the detail of the case. Families of the victims and the lead defense attorney exchanged heated words near the end of the trial after the attorney described at least one murder victim as a bum. "He wasn't a bum. He was my son," objected Carlos de Freitas from the gallery. "He was an unarmed 16-year-old boy, shot in the head and the back. Your client is a murderer." Under Brazil's judicial system, the case will probably be retried after appeals, in part because of the jury's split decision. The jurors, all members of Brazil's white middle class, voted four in favor of absolution and three for conviction, a majority decision acceptable under Brazilian law. - --- Checked-by: Don Beck