This paper examines the case of Luís Eduardo Botura, a Brazilian fugitive accused of leading a criminal organization that systematically weaponized the judiciary to commit document fraud, coerce authorities, and launder assets offshore. Drawing on investigative journalism from the Brazilian television program Fantástico (Rede Globo, 2025), judicial records, and academic literature on serial litigation and organized crime in Brazil, the paper analyzes how a private actor can exploit procedural good-faith loopholes, legal access rights, and the chronic overload of the Brazilian court system to defraud hundreds of victims while evading justice across international borders. The study contributes to the growing body of research on sham litigation, predatory litigation (litigância predatória), and judicial harassment as instruments of white-collar crime. It further evaluates the international dimension of the case, including the Interpol Red Notice, the Italian arrest, and extradition proceedings before the Venice Court of Appeal. Finally, the paper offers policy recommendations aimed at systemic reform to prevent the misuse of judicial institutions for criminal purposes.
Zen Revista (Tue,) studied this question.