Superior Military Court (Brazil)
The Superior Military Court (Brazilian Portuguese: Superior Tribunal Militar, STM) is a body of Brazil's Military Justice system, composed of fifteen life-tenured justices appointed by the president of the Republic after approval by the Federal Senate. Of the fifteen members, three are selected from among general officers of the Navy, four from among general officers of the Army, and three from among general officers of the Air Force — all on active duty and at the highest rank of their respective careers — while five are civilians.[1]
The civilian ministers are appointed by the president of the Republic from among Brazilian citizens over thirty-five and under seventy years of age. Three must be lawyers of notable legal knowledge and unblemished reputation with more than ten years of effective professional activity, and two are chosen, on a parity basis, from among military judges (auditor judges) of the Military Justice system and members of the Military Public Prosecutor's Office.
The STM has jurisdiction to hear appeals and other legal remedies against decisions issued by first-instance military judges, in accordance with Article 124 of the Federal Constitution. At the state level, a state military justice system may be established, composed in the first instance of judges of law and Councils of Justice, and in the second instance by the respective Court of Justice or by Military Courts of Justice in states whose military forces exceed twenty thousand members, in accordance with Article 125, paragraph 3 of the Federal Constitution.
The current president is Maria Elizabeth Guimarães Teixeira Rocha, and the vice-president is Francisco Joseli Parente Camelo, since 12 March 2025. This is the first time the court has been presided over by a woman.[2]
Current members
| Justice / Birthdate | Initial date (inauguration) | Branch | Appointed by | Limite date (retirement) | Observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maria Elizabeth Rocha
(29 January 1960) |
27 March 2007 | Civilian | Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva | 2035 | President (2025–2027 term) |
| Artur Vidigal de Oliveira
(6 October 1960) |
11 May 2010 | Civilian | Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva | 2035 | |
| José Barroso Filho
(15 February 1967) |
10 April 2014 | Civilian | Dilma Rousseff | 2042 | |
| Francisco Joseli Parente Camelo
(25 April 1953) |
07 May 2015 | Air Force | Dilma Rousseff | 2028 | Vice-President (2025–2027 term) |
| Péricles Aurélio Lima de Queiroz
(25 February 1955) |
01 June 2016 | Civilian | Dilma Rousseff | 2030 | |
| Carlos Vuyk de Aquino
(8 May 1956) |
27 November 2018 | Air Force | Michel Temer | 2031 | |
| Leonardo Puntel
(27 November 1958) |
02 October 2020 | Navy | Jair Bolsonaro | 2033 | |
| Celso Luiz Nazareth
(7 April 1957) |
02 October 2020 | Navy | Jair Bolsonaro | 2032 | |
| Carlos Augusto Amaral Oliveira
(13 May 1960) |
19 October 2020 | Air Force | Jair Bolsonaro | 2035 | |
| Cláudio Portugal de Viveiros
(2 February 1959) |
05 August 2021 | Navy | Jair Bolsonaro | 2034 | |
| Lourival Carvalho Silva
(10 December 1958) |
17 August 2022 | Army | Jair Bolsonaro | 2033 | |
| Guido Amin Naves
(08 June 1962) |
24 February 2025 | Army | Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva | 2037 | |
| Verônica Sterman
(22 March 1984) |
30 September 2025 | Civilian | Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva | 2059 | |
| Anisio David de Oliveira Junior
(1963) |
05 December 2025 | Army | Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva | 2038 | |
| Flavio Marcus Lancia Barbosa
(28 February 1964) |
09 December 2025 | Army | Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva | 2039 |
References
- ^ Interagi. "Organograma". www.stm.jus.br (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2026-03-16.
- ^ "Indicada por Lula assume STM e se torna a primeira mulher a presidir tribunal militar". O Globo (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2024-12-05. Retrieved 2026-03-16.