Brazil has different legal mechanisms that direct the criminal treatment of controlled substances:
1. The Drug Law of 2006
2. The Criminal Code.
In this sense, the 2006 Law denotes improvement. Drug crimes are classified “heinous” or serious crimes, along with murder, rape and kidnapping, without taking into account the degree of involvement.
Brazilians have long had to accept corruption scandals as a continuing part of their country history. Prosecutors have constructed the reform statute known as 10 Measures Against Corruption, which was presented to the Congress earlier as a public initiative approved by over 2 million Brazilians to deal with corruption. The Brazilians themselves and the strong media means deserve credit for the gradual end of impunity. In the past years, the public took to the streets at numerous times to protest waste and corruption. Authorities have made nearly 200 arrests, and the lower courts have sentenced over 80 people, including the ex-CEO of Latin America’s most prevalent construction group. The Supreme Court, which is responsible for trying officials, is treating over 100 additional