In 1996, Moro started teaching law graduates at his
alma mater, the
Federal University of Paraná. This very same year, he became a
federal judge in
Porto Alegre, before moving to
Joinville, Santa Catarina, in 1999. Between 2003 and 2007, Moro worked on a case involving the public bank Banestado. The investigation resulted in the arrest of nearly 200 people for
tax evasion and
money laundering. In 2012, he worked with
Rosa Weber, a minister of the
Brazilian Supreme Court, in the
Mensalão scandal. Weber called him because of his experience with cases involving financial crimes, more specifically money laundering. After leaving the judiciary and the
Bolsonaro government, his first case as a lawyer, in 2020, favored controversial Israeli businessman
Beny Steinmetz, in a dispute against mining company
Vale S.A. In the same year, Moro was hired as a partner by the consultancy
Alvarez & Marsal, judicial administrator of the recovery process of the
Odebrecht Group – the company targeted by then judge Moro during
Lava Jato. Moro worked for Alvarez & Marsal for almost one year and was paid approximately half million dollars.
Operation Car Wash In 2014, while working in
Curitiba, Sergio Moro became one of the head judges in
Operation Car Wash (), a massive criminal investigation that started as a money laundering case and evolved to a huge corruption scandal crackdown, involving bribery and misappropriation of public funds by political authorities. The investigation was modeled after
Mani pulite in Italy. Corruption scandals in Brazil usually take a long time to be investigated and the legal processes tend to stagnate. However, at an unusual speed, Moro authorized further investigations, detentions and interrogations of suspects. By late 2017, at least 120 sentences were carried and 175 people were sent to jail. Despite some criticism from fellow jurists for being a "media darling", Moro enjoyed high popularity with the Brazilian people and became one of the main faces in the fight against corruption in the country. Despite criticisms regarding the high speed with which he imposed sentences in such a complex case, his actions were backed by the Brazilian Supreme Court and most of his sentences and decisions were upheld in higher courts. By late 2016, Moro had sent 28 people to jail on charges of corruption, with four of them having their sentences reduced and another four being acquitted by higher courts. Overall, in Operation Car Wash, 71% of the sentences given by Moro were upheld by the Brazilian
Regional Federal Courts. However, in 2021, due to Moro's conviction for partiality, famous Lava Jato defendants reaped the fruits of the decisions of the Federal Supreme Court that relaxed the jurisprudence that had taken politicians, businessmen and bribery operators to jail. The number of whistleblower petitions, initial investigations, inquiry requests, etc. dropped from 257 to 200. Of the 31 inquiries, 3 were filed in 2021, 7 complaints await judgment (the same number as in 2020) and no convictions. In 2017, Moro sentenced former Brazilian president,
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, to 9 and a half years in jail, on the charges of money laundering and passive corruption. Lula was considered the frontrunner for the 2018 presidential election. The decision was later overturned by the
Supreme Court of Brazil in 2021, which stated that Moro had acted with partiality. The April 2022 decision of Lula's 2016 petition was ratified and expanded by the
UN human rights committee. Additionally, in a unanimous decision in April, the
Regional Federal Court (TRF) ruled that Lula's lawyers be compensated for the telephone interception and illegal secrecy lifting determined by Moro in 2016
Minister of Justice In many of his encounters with the media and further interviews, Sergio Moro described himself as "apolitical" and said he had no interested in joining the political world. However, right after the
2018 elections, rumors started to circulate that the president-elect,
Jair Bolsonaro, was considering nominating Moro to head the
Ministry of Justice. Despite claiming he was unaware of such a plan, it was later revealed that Moro was contacted by Paulo Guedes, an incoming member of Bolsonaro's administration, during Bolsonaro's election campaign. Exactly four days after the election, on 1 November 2018, Moro met with Bolsonaro and it was announced that he would become a minister in Bolsonaro's administration. His nomination was well received by fellow
magistrates across the country, but opponents of Bolsonaro and some people in the press criticized the decision on the grounds of conflict of interest, claiming that Moro's sentencing of former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva greatly benefited Bolsonaro's bid for the presidency. On 12 May 2019, president Bolsonaro publicly expressed the intention of nominating Moro to the Supreme Federal Court, replacing Justice
Celso de Mello, who would retire in 2020. However, on 1 October 2020, he nominated Kassio
Nunes Marques. During his short 15 months tenure as Minister of Justice and Public Security, Moro focused on fighting organized crime, border security and taking new anti-corruption measures, with different degrees of success.
Crime fell sharply across the board in most of the country in 2019, but if that was due to any government action or not remains unknown. However, as 2020 came along, the relationship between Moro and Bolsonaro deteriorated due to a variety of factors. First, Moro started to complain about the president's interference in his ministry. According to the former judge, during talks about him assuming the Ministry of Justice, Bolsonaro made a promise to Moro that he would have independence to run his ministry the way he saw fit, including the appointment of personnel, especially in the
Federal Police. However, that changed over time and the president started to interfere in investigations and in the way Moro was running the ministry. On top of that, Moro also criticized Bolsonaro's handling of the
COVID-19 pandemic. On 24 April 2020, after an unjustified discharge of
Federal Police's Director-General Maurício Valeixo by president Bolsonaro, Moro decided to announce that he would leave the Ministry, while denouncing the president's intention to meddle in investigations. He then started a career as lawyer and attorney.
Political career As a Lava Jato judge, Moro repeatedly stated that "
There is no possibility of a political career”. However, he actually started his political career in November 2018, when he accepted the invitation of President
Jair Bolsonaro to be the head of the Ministry of Justice and Public Security. He joined the political party
Podemos (PODE) on November 10, 2021 and confirmed that he was building his government project, as a pre-candidate for the Brazilian presidency. Moro had emerged as a "third way" candidate against poll-leading former president Lula on the left and extreme-right Bolsonaro. However, after leaving the Podemos party, Moro removed himself from the run for the presidency. His popularity has faded, due to his controversial decision to join the Bolsonaro cabinet, and of political bias and judicial overreach that tainted the legacy of the “Car Wash” investigation. Moro joins the
Liberal Party in 2026 to run for the governorship of
Paraná, being endorsed by
Flávio Bolsonaro soon after. == Controversies ==