“Justice delayed is not justice denied,” he said after a 2021 hearing. “But it is justice wounded. I will not abandon the wound.” In a move that surprised many, Mariz de Oliveira agreed in 2022 to represent former president Jair Bolsonaro’s son, Carlos Bolsonaro, a Rio de Janeiro city councilman, in a case involving alleged digital militias and spying on political opponents. The younger Bolsonaro faced accusations of running a disinformation network. Mariz de Oliveira again leaned on procedural defenses—arguing that the investigation violated constitutional separation of powers.
In an age of summary judgment, both online and offline, that phrase sounds almost quaint. But Mariz de Oliveira has built a life out of speaking it into the record—loud enough to be heard, quiet enough to be ignored, and persistent enough to outlast the outrage.
“He never calculated the public relations cost,” recalls a former associate who asked to remain anonymous. “If a client had been demonized by the press, Carlos would lean in harder. He saw media conviction as the first form of illegal punishment.” Mariz de Oliveira’s first major public crucible came with Cesar Maia, the economist and politician who served as mayor of Rio de Janeiro (1993–1996) and later as governor of Rio state. Maia was a polarizing figure: praised for fiscal austerity but accused of shady privatization deals. When allegations of contract fraud in the city’s cleaning services (Comlurb) emerged, Maia faced impeachment proceedings and criminal probes. carlos mariz de oliveira teixeira .pdf
“Carlos lost the war, but he won several battles that will help future defendants,” said criminal law expert Fernando Hideo. “He forced Lava Jato to tighten its chain of custody. That is a legacy.” One of the longest-running threads in Mariz de Oliveira’s career is the unsolved killing of Celso Daniel, the mayor of Santo André (São Paulo state) and a rising star of the Workers’ Party (PT). Daniel was kidnapped and murdered in 2002. For nearly two decades, the case languished, plagued by false leads and allegations that the PT itself had covered up links to organized crime.
“Carlos is from the generation that believes law is a science, not a performance,” said a partner at his firm. “He would rather lose a case on a brilliant point of law than win on a dramatic closing argument.” There is no statue of Carlos Mariz de Oliveira Teixeira in Rio de Janeiro. There are no streets named after him. But in the appellate courts of Brasília, his name appears in hundreds of precedents. He has taught courses at Fundação Getulio Vargas (FGV) and the University of Lisbon. He has written no bestseller—only legal monographs with titles like Presunção de Inocência e Execução Provisória da Pena (Presumption of Innocence and Provisional Execution of Sentence). “Justice delayed is not justice denied,” he said
Critics howled. After defending center-right figures (Maia, Cabral) and working for a left-wing family (Daniel), Mariz de Oliveira was now tied to the far right. Was he an ideologue or an opportunist?
His critics say he has laundered reputations for oligarchs. His admirers say he has kept the flame of due process alive through two dictatorships (military and populist) and one anti-corruption frenzy. The younger Bolsonaro faced accusations of running a
He earned his law degree from the Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (UERJ) and quickly added a master’s in criminal procedure from the Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Fluent in English, Spanish, and French, he also obtained a license to practice in Portugal, giving him a transatlantic reach rare among Brazilian litigators. By the late 1980s, he had co-founded the firm that would become Mariz de Oliveira & Sociedade de Advogados, known for taking cases that other firms refused—often on principle.