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The information is found in the first clause of the deed of sale of the mansion, according to the newspaper “Folha de S.Paulo”. TV Globo also had access to the document.
“The seller (s) declares (s) that they have already received from the buyer (s) the amount corresponding to the portion of their own resources indicated in Own Resources of the article Purchase and Sale Price / Payment Method”, says the text of the writing.
According to the document, Senator Flávio Bolsonaro and Fernanda, his wife, paid R $ 2.87 million with “their own resources” and the rest (R $ 3.1 million) through financing from the Bank of Brasilia (BRB), with a reduced interest rate of 3.71% per annum.
On Tuesday (2), the former owner of the house, businessman Juscelino Sarkis, said that the deal was closed, according to the deed.
“Everything paid. One part paid, the other part was financed, it was also paid. The transaction is fine,” he said.
But a note signed on Wednesday (3) by the businessman’s lawyers reveals that Flávio Bolsonaro still owes R $ 1.78 million.
According to the lawyers, it paid R $ 3.1 million from the financing of BRB and another R $ 1.09 million in three bank transfers in November and December.
The lawyers specializing in real estate transactions assure that the deed is a document of public faith, which serves as evidence, and that the situation can be understood as an ideological falsehood.
Article 299 of the Penal Code says that it is an ideological falsehood “to omit, in a public or private document, a statement that must be included in it, or to insert or cause to insert a false statement or different from the one that must be written.”
The businessman Juscelino Sarkis said in a message on Thursday (4) that all the information has already been provided. Sarkis’s attorneys, who signed the note Wednesday, did not respond to attempts to contact them.
The mansion bought by the senator is in a condominium with few houses in a privileged area of Brasilia. Flávio Bolsonaro already owns the property.
But, in addition to owing R $ 1.78 million directly to the ex-owner, Flávio Bolsonaro will have to pay, over the next 30 years, a payment of about R $ 20 thousand per month.
The financing is linked to the Comprehensive Consumer Price Index (IPCA), an index that measures inflation and that has been increasing month by month. That is, with high inflation, the debt ends up rising.
At this time, the fee already commits more than half of the monthly income declared by Flavio and his wife.
VIDEO: Announcement brings images of the mansion bought by Flávio Bolsonaro
TV Globo asked the senator’s staff when and how he plans to pay what he owes directly to the former owner, but he declined to respond.
Senator Flávio Bolsonaro has declared that all negotiations are legal. According to him, the funds for the purchase of the house came from the sale of a stake in a chocolate shop and the property where he lived, in Barra da Tijuca, in Rio de Janeiro.
But he has not produced any evidence and the public record of that sale does not yet exist.
The senator is investigated in the so-called “crackers” scheme while he is still a state deputy in Rio. The suspicion is that he misappropriated resources from part of the salaries of his advisers in the Legislative Assembly and that he used real estate to launder money.