The text approved by the Chamber of Deputies for the Anti-Faction Bill will make it difficult to punish major leaders of organized crime in the country. According to the former national secretary of Public Security, Mario Sarrubbo, the difficulties will also be financial, since, for political reasons, the deputies made resources that would have been obtained from the bets to supply the National Public Security Fund (FNSP) unfeasible. 
Sarrubbo was interviewed on the program Hello Hello Brazilfrom the National Radio this Thursday (26).
He explained that, If the text is sanctioned in its current version, the law created “will only reach the base of criminal organizations”, leaving aside those who, according to him, “are on the top floor”.
“It was against them [os verdadeiros comandantes das organizações criminosas] that we wanted to move forward”, he added, highlighting that the focus of the text was restricted to violent crimes, freeing politicians linked to organized crime, as well as those who, in fact, finance crime.
Changes in the Chamber
The version presented by the rapporteur of the anti-faction PL in the Chamber, Guilherme Derrite (PP-SP), rejected the changes made in the Senatewhich, in Sarrubbo’s assessment, even harmed the allocation of resources to states, to combat criminal organizations, since it excluded the taxation of bets for the creation of the FNSP.
“The Chamber did not want to provide resources for this fund for political reasons. Derrite [relator na Câmara] removed this from the text. It would be R$30 billion [que iriam das Bets] for the FNSP. Resources that would actually go to the states, because this is not a federal government resource.”
financial heart
He recalled that the initial proposal created “mechanisms to reach those who work at Faria Lima and Fintechs; those who finance these criminal organizations”said the former secretary. “
Faria Lima doesn’t take rifles”, he added when referring to Operation Hidden Carbon, which identified a criminal scheme that would have moved resources from criminal organizations such as Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC).
Sarrubbo highlighted that the idea defended by the government is to financially stifle criminal factions.
“The time to climb the hill is after we manage to stem the financial flow of criminal organizations, when they are without rifles, disorganized and unable to pay their scouts. Then we will [as forças de segurança] can act consistently. With low lethality and very efficiency, we begin to take over these territories.”
