Brazilian President Michel Temer – File photos
BRASILIA – 9 September 2017: Brazil's top prosecutor on Friday charged six lawmakers from President Michel Temer's Brazilian Democracy Movement Party (PMDB) with forming a criminal organization, the latest in a barrage of charges in Brazil's sprawling corruption scandal.
Those accused by Rodrigo Janot in a filing with the Supreme Court include former senator and president Jose Sarney, the government's leader in the senate Romero Juca and four other current senators.
A corruption scandal involving cartels of companies bribing officials for public contracts has enveloped most of Brazil's political elite with Janot expected to issue another charge against Temer in coming weeks.
Temer defeated a first corruption charge from Janot, when the lower house of Congress voted not to allow it to proceed to trial.
Separately on Friday, the Supreme Court said it would consider next week requests from Temer that would block Janot from issuing further charges.
In the charges against the senators, Janot alleges the group unduly received 864 million reais ($279.84 million) and generated related losses of 5.5 billion reais for state-controlled oil firm Petrobras and 113 million reais for its subsidiary Transpetro.
Transpetro's former president, Sergio Machado, was also charged.
The PMDB said in a statement that the prosecutor lacked evidence and that it trusted the Supreme Court would set the charges aside.
Juca said in a statement he believes the Supreme Court will seriously analyze the charges and he hopes for a speedy investigation.
Janot's latest charges echo those against former presidents Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Dilma Rousseff and six other members of the Workers Party for criminal organization earlier this week. Lula and Rousseff deny the charges.
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