Two Brazilian Police Arrested Over Killing of Activist Marielle Franco

Slain Brazilian LGBT activist and city councilor Marielle Franco. Photo: AFP

Two police officers were arrested Tuesday in the killing of Rio city councilor and black gay rights activist Marielle Franco, almost a year to the day after the brazen murder shocked Brazil.

Franco, 38, who was black, grew up in a slum and went on to become a respected defender of the poor and the LGBT community, and an outspoken critic of police brutality.

She was slain in a drive-by shooting along with her driver, Anderson Gomes, in downtown Rio de Janeiro on the evening of March 14, 2018. Her death triggered protests around the world and mass demonstrations in Brazil.

“Two days before the anniversary of the death of my daughter, it is a consolation to know the police have arrested suspects. It was high time to get an answer,” Franco’s mother, Marinete Silva told the G1 news site.

“Now we need to know who ordered it,” she added.


Summary Execution

A sergeant in the military police, Roni Lessa, 48, was arrested on suspicion of being the shooter, the Rio prosecutor’s office said in a statement.

He was taken into custody at his home, a luxury seaside residence in Barra de Tijuca, an upscale Rio neighborhood where Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro also reportedly owns a home.

Elcio Vieira de Queiroz, 46, who had been sacked from the military police, also was arrested in a pre-dawn operation that was broadcast live on television. Weapons and documents were recovered in the raid.

He is suspected of driving the vehicle that tracked Franco after she left a meeting with political activists. Lessa is alleged to have fired 13 shots into Franco’s car as they drove by.

Prosecutors in a special organized crime unit say the shooting was meticulously planned over the course of three months, and there is no doubt that Franco was “summarily executed” because of her position and the causes that she defended.


Case Not Settled

The murder “was an attempt to silence all those movements that are growing: of black women, of the LGBT population – they wanted black women to abandon their fights, and for the LGBT population to withdraw,” Franco’s partner Monica Benicio told AFP last week during the Rio carnival festivities.

After Rio hosted the summer Olympics in 2016, violence increased between drug gangs as well as between these gangs and paramilitary police militia and security forces.

Marcelo Freixo, a federal lawmaker and mentor of Franco, said Tuesday’s arrests were “a decisive step but the case has not yet been solved.”

“Who ordered the killing? What was the political motivation?” he said on Globonews television.

“Marielle did not have an armored vehicle, and no protection because she had never received a threat,” said Freixo, a member of a commission investigating paramilitary police who is himself under police protection.

The conservative government of Michel Temer, Bolsonaro’s predecessor, had promised to make swift arrests and to bring to trial those responsible for the city’s councilor’s killing, a pledge regarded with skepticism in a country where the vast majority of homicides go unpunished.

Bolsonaro – a far-right leader with well-documented anti-gay and racist views – is one of the only major politicians in the country who has not publically condemned the killing.

The investigation made little progress in the first year, to the frustration of human rights activists who have campaigned relentlessly to keep the case alive. Franco’s image can still be seen on walls around Rio de Janeiro, with the message “Marielle present.”

For the anniversary of her death on Thursday, demonstrations have been planned around the country. Homage was paid to Franco during the Rio carnival by a samba school, Mangueira, which went on to be crowned champion of the parade.


More on the Subject

RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – The newest Brazilian President, Jair Bolsonaro, took office on January first with harsh and divisive messages and promises to the Brazilian population.

His inauguration speech, which was broadcasted on national television and watched by several foreign heads of states, set the tone for the next four years.

Policies that would affect the LGBT community and other minority groups have left activists hoping that the president will fail to deliver on his promises, while Bolsonaro’s supporters are cheering on their new leader.

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