The 2nd Public Finance Court of Macapá authorized the State Government of Amapa and its own social security system (RPPS) Amapá Previdência (Amprev) suspend transfers of loans of Main bank deducted from the payroll of civil servants, retirees and retirees. The objective of the decision is to guarantee the recovery of the 400 million BRL invested by the foundation in financial letters with the bank, in extrajudicial liquidation since November.
In other words, in practice, the State does not repay the loans taken out by its employees and retirees and retains the resources. According to the decision, the money must be deposited in a specific account of the Banco do Brasil, to serve as real security while the merits of the action are judged, and every 90 days the accumulated amount must be reported to the court.
At the same time, the Master is prohibited from refusing or charging employees and retirees included in the suspension, under penalty of a daily fine of R$100,000.
“The situation presented by the authors is particularly serious, because the sums invested, which present a very high risk of not being recovered, are of the order of 400 million reais, a sum which, if not recovered, could affect the payment of retirement benefits, in addition to benefits and other expenses related to the operation of Amprev,” wrote judge Paulo Cesar do Vale Madeira.
In the country, 18 RPPS, state and municipal funds, purchased R$1.867 billion out of a total of R$2.3 billion issued in main financial letters between 2023 and 2024. The tranche corresponds to R$1.867 billion out of a total of R$2.3 billion.
Rioprevidência, which serves more than 230,000 civilian and military employees in Rio de Janeiro, invested the largest volume, 970 million reais, at a level much higher than the others. Amprev is the second RPPS on the list, which allocated 400 million reais. The RPPS of Amazonas allocated 50 million reais to the institution, according to data from the Ministry of Social Security. According to the ministry, all contributions were made through financial letters, a mechanism that is not covered by the Credit Guarantee Fund (FGC).
Also on the list are the town halls of Aparecida de Goiânia (GO), which contributed BRL 40 million over this period, and Maceió (AL), with BRL 97 million.
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