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Denise Frossard

Denise Frossard Loschi is a judge and politician from Brazil. She studied law and served as a magistrate in Rio de Janeiro. She has been a law professor at the Getúlio Vargas Foundation. When she retired she started working for Transparency International.

Career
Frossard was born in Carangola, Minas Gerais. Her parents, José de Araújo Loschi and Maria de Lourdes Gomes Frossard, were from the Zona da Mata region in the state of Minas Gerais. Her paternal grandfather, Oreste Loschi, was an Italian immigrant born into a farming family in the commune of Carpi (province of Modena). On her maternal side, Denise is also descended from French-speaking Swiss who first settled in Nova Friburgo. She graduated in Law from the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro (PUC-RJ) in 1976, and worked as a lawyer from 1977 to 1984 and as a judge in the State of Rio de Janeiro from 1984 to 1998. She was the trial judge who on May 14, 1993, convicted 14 racketeers who control the lucrative Jogo do Bicho (the “animal game” – an illegal but popular numbers gamble) in Rio de Janeiro. The so-called bicheiros were a notorious source of corruption of police officers, politicians, part of the media and even social organisations such as the samba schools, that organise Rio's world-famous Carnival parades, a huge source of tourist income to both the city and the state). Frossard sentenced them to six years' imprisonment. "The animal game is a deeply embedded cultural phenomenon with a certain romantic aura, and thus hard to eradicate," according to Frossard. "But it is also a quintessentially Brazilian way of laundering money and contributes greatly to the problem of impunity in this country." Judge Frossard was subjected to pressures from both the political establishment and the Judiciary itself and her life has been threatened. She has been the target of assassination attempts that she attributes to hired guns in the pay of game kingpins. After the judgment in 1993, she spent a year in the United States, returning to head the Brazilian branches of Transparency International and the Women's Bank. In 1998, she could have been promoted to desembargador (appellate judge), but opted for politics instead. She tried for the Senate and received 635,000 votes, but lost to Saturnino Braga. In 2005 she received the Medalha Tiradentes by the Legislative Assembly of the State of Rio de Janeiro, for relevant services offered to the State of Rio de Janeiro. ==References==
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