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>Temilson Antonio Barreto de Resende was sentenced to three years in prison in 2002
ied out by members of the government itself, more specifically the Undersecretariat of Intelligence (SSI) of the Brazilian Intelligence Agency (Abin) in Rio. The inquiry, chaired by delegate Rubens Grandini, lasts for more than three months and took statements from 52 people. Grandini considers that he has already reached the names of those who tapped 12 lines in the telephone distribution boxes in the BNDES building
One of the suspects is TemĂlson AntĂ´nio Barreto de Resende, 47, known by the aliases Telmo and Barreto, who works at the SSI office in Rio as an information analyst. Another suspect is AdĂlson Alcântara de Matos, a former corporal at the Navy Information Center (Cenimar), who currently provides private and business investigation services. The third name on the list is that of retired Air Force colonel Eudo Santos Costa, investigated for wiretapping in another PF investigation.
The colonel was heard by delegate Grandini and denied everything. Through Carlos Kringsberg, his lawyer, TemĂlson said that he was not called to testify and has nothing to do with the story. AdĂlson also denied participation in the wiretapping, but was summoned to provide clarification in the inquiry on Friday, April 30th. "I think I was only called because of my friendship with TelmĂlson", said Adilson. Using his friend as a contact, the former Cenimar corporal has already provided services to the PF and SSI. Today, AdĂlson guarantees that he has no business with TemĂlson. "They must have tapped his phones and picked up our conversations, but I have nothing to do with it. He's in government intelligence. I'm a private detective," says the former corporal.
TemĂlson is a typical Araponga trained in the extinct National Information Service (SNI).He took courses in interception of communications abroad and headed the counterintelligence section of the SSI. Another conclusion is that the staplers were covered by the BNDES' security, headed by JosĂ© Armando Tadei. There is no evidence, however, of his participation. It turned out that, in addition to facilitating the access of the staplers to the building, the security did not take precautions against eavesdropping during the telephony privatization auction.
Deputy Grandini has only one agent working to help him on the case, and he's still facing a curious problem. He only deals with important matters personally because the extensions he uses in the PF suffer from the same ailment as the BNDES telephones: they are tapped. The fear of wiretaps also spreads through BrasĂlia's offices. Since January, the PF has made a team of trackers available to ministers and has edited a manual with tips to make calls safer. Ten ministries were scanned.
Too many wiretaps
The investigation by delegate Grandini, to find out who tapped BNDES phones in Rio, reflected in BrasĂlia.
If this has not yet occurred due to its results, at least it has changed the customs. An "anti-eavesdropping manual" has been published that tells how to talk on the phone.
Surprise Gift
Pio Borges, president of BNDES, received a very expensive lighter as a gift from Carlos Jereissati, the majority shareholder of Telemar. He was scared: Jereissati is the main suspect of having sent tapes of embarrassing conversations between Luiz Carlos Mendonça de Barros, his brother José Roberto, André Lara Resende, Persio Arida and Borges himself, to the Planalto Palace.
Carlos Jereissati, however, tries to be nice to the man who runs the BNDES now because Telemar needs an urgent loan, until August, to pay part of Tele Norte