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ON THE DEFENSIVE

Brazilian football club defends decision to sign goalkeeper jailed over murder of his ex-girlfriend who was strangled and fed to his ROTTWEILERS

Bruno Fernandes de Souza arranged her ­murder to avoid paying child support

A FOOTBALL club that signed a goalkeeper who served six years in jail after having his lover tortured, murdered and fed to rottweilers has defended its decision as "courageous".

Brazilian beauty Eliza Samudio's four-month-old son saw his mother being tortured and beaten before being strangled, chopped into pieces and fed to the pack of dogs.

 Bruno Fernandes de Souza, 32, has signed for a top club in Brazil just weeks after being released from jail
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Bruno Fernandes de Souza, 32, has signed for a top club in Brazil just weeks after being released from jailCredit: CEN
 Bruno was found guilty in 2013 of ordering the killing of model Eliza Samudio. He served just six years and seven months in total since his 2010 arrest
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Bruno was found guilty in 2013 of ordering the killing of model Eliza Samudio. He served just six years and seven months in total since his 2010 arrestCredit: Getty Images
 Bruno was found guilty in 2013 of ordering his girlfriend's murder. The trial heard he saw as Eliza Samudio's body was fed to his dogs
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Bruno was found guilty in 2013 of ordering his girlfriend's murder. The trial heard he saw as Eliza Samudio's body was fed to his dogsCredit: Getty Images

Model Eliza, 25, paid a deadly price for having a baby with one of Brazil’s top footballers, Bruno Fernandes de Souza, who arranged her ­murder to avoid paying child support.

However, thanks to the leniency of the Brazilian legal system, after serving just six years, 32-year-old Bruno is now out of jail and back on the pitch while he appeals his sentence.

He has signed a contract to return to professional football as goalkeeper for Boa Esporte, and club owner Rafael Gois Silva Xavier said this week: “He was found guilty, he served his time and he was released by the courts.

"He deserves another opportunity.”

 Bruno grins with club figures as he signs for Boa Esporte. He was let out of jail in February on a legal technicality
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Bruno grins with club figures as he signs for Boa Esporte. He was let out of jail in February on a legal technicalityCredit: CEN
 Bruno Fernandes had been a top goalie for Rio side Flamengo
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Bruno Fernandes had been a top goalie for Rio side FlamengoCredit: Getty Images

“You have to show people that what Bruno did wasn’t correct, but that he has the right to return to society,” Moraes told reporters in the club’s home town of Varginha.

“I am someone who likes a challenge,” Moraes added.

“Boa is not doing anything wrong, Boa is not a court of justice, Boa is an entity in the world of sports. And Bruno knows how to play football.”

Bruno also appeared before the media but he declined to answer questions that were not directly about playing.

 Feminist activists protest against Boa Esporte's hiring of goalkeeper Bruno in front of the club's headquarters
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Feminist activists protest against Boa Esporte's hiring of goalkeeper Bruno in front of the club's headquartersCredit: Getty Images

Several of the club's sponsors, including their kit maker, abandoned Boa Esporte within days of the deal, and fans have flooded social media with criticism.

The 32-year old, who won the first division with Flamengo in 2009, said he had the backing of God and his family.

"I am very happy to have been given this opportunity," he said. "I don't care what people say. What matters to me is that I am starting again. It's a lot of responsibility."

The brilliant goalkeeper had captained his Rio side ­Flamengo to the top of the Serie A league, was tipped to play for his national side in the 2014 World Cup and rumours were growing of a multi-million-pound transfer deal to AC Milan.

But in 2013 his glittering career appeared to be over when he was sentenced to 22 years in jail for his part in the grisly plot.

 

 Bruno Fernandes sits in court during his trial. He was found guilty in 2013 of ordering the murder of his girlfriend
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Bruno Fernandes sits in court during his trial. He was found guilty in 2013 of ordering the murder of his girlfriendCredit: Getty Images
 Eliza Samudio had taken Bruno to court before her death over abuse and child maintenance claims
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Eliza Samudio had taken Bruno to court before her death over abuse and child maintenance claimsCredit: Getty Images
 Bruno is led to court during his murder trial. He served just six years and seven months of a 22-year sentence
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Bruno is led to court during his murder trial. He served just six years and seven months of a 22-year sentenceCredit: Getty Images

After baby Bruninho was born, she had been lured into a car on the promise that Bruno would give her an apartment and all the maintenance pay she wanted. Instead, she was pistol-whipped and driven with her baby to Bruno’s house.

There she was strapped to a chair and beaten for six days by a gang of Bruno’s cronies — including his wife, another ­former lover, his teenage cousin and a former police officer, Marcos Santos.

It is claimed Bruno himself watched as Santos committed “barbaric tortures” on the victim, playing music to drown out her screams before strangling her with a tie in front of her son.

 Eliza Samudio was fed to rottweilers
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Eliza Samudio was fed to rottweilers

She was then chopped up and the pieces put into black bin bags. One of the cronies headed for the ­kennels, where Bruno kept his ten rottweilers.

First he threw them a hand, which was devoured in seconds. Then, part by part, the rest of the body was thrown to the dogs until only bones were left. These were then buried and covered with wet concrete.

Eliza’s fate had been sealed when she turned from modelling to the murky world of soccer groupies.

Although Bruno was married with two daughters, he and other players regularly attended marathon 24-hour sex parties where, as a source close to the club put it: “Beautiful women would volunteer to have sex without commitment.”

At one such party in May, 2009, organised by teammate Paulo Victor, he met Eliza, who had previously been linked to Cristiano Ronaldo.

He was soon besotted and they began a relationship, but after three months she became pregnant when a condom split. At that point Bruno turned nasty, insisting she must get an abortion — but she refused.

During her pregnancy Eliza went to the police, claiming she had been kidnapped by two of Bruno’s friends who forced her to take an illegal drug which would induce miscarriage.

The drug did not work and in ­February 2010 she gave birth to Bruninho — which translates as “Little Bruno”.

 Eliza Samudio poses with a baby bump after getting pregnant by Bruno
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Eliza Samudio poses with a baby bump after getting pregnant by BrunoCredit: Getty Images

A DNA test showed the baby was Bruno’s, and Eliza filed a paternity suit against him. Four months later, both she and her baby disappeared.

Bruninho was later found ­abandoned in a slum district in south east Brazil. Police took in Bruno for questioning and he told them Eliza had left the country.

But her friends and relatives thought otherwise as they knew the new mother would never have abandoned her son.

A search of Bruno’s car found bloodstains, a pair of sandals and women’s sunglasses, yet still he insisted in an interview: “I pray that Eliza will appear, and when that happens, if I am the father I will fight for the guardianship, because I don’t believe in leaving a child. I have a clear conscience.”

While the police were investigating Eliza’s disappearance, Bruno was charged over her initial claims of being abducted by two of his friends during her ­pregnancy, and was sentenced to four and a half years in jail.

 Eliza Samudio's sexy figure caught the football star's eye
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Eliza Samudio's sexy figure caught the football star's eye

The revelation shocked Brazil and Bruno was suspended from his team. But Eliza’s body had still not been found, and cops were convinced of the fallen star’s involvement.

Eventually one of Bruno’s co-conspirators — his teenage cousin — confessed all, though Bruno still denied everything. As he walked into court to face a murder charge in 2013, he told reporters he had a “clear conscience” and added: “In the future, I’ll be able to laugh at this.”

His lawyer said: “He’ll be in the World Cup final, in Maracana, against Argentina. It will end 0-0. Who will take the penalty? The world’s greatest player, Messi.

‘His acts were almost impossible to describe’

“And who will save it and lift the trophy for 200 million Brazilians? Bruno. This is his biggest dream.”

In court it was alleged by the prosecution that he had arranged the murder after Eliza took legal action in an attempt to secure child support. However, after ­protesting his innocence Bruno finally broke down in court and confessed to his part in the plot.

He claimed he had not made the order to kill Eliza but had “accepted” it and knew she had been killed.

Bruno sobbed and admitted a loyal friend of his had commissioned the murder for £8,000.

The gang who tortured Eliza received sentences of between five and 22 years, while Bruno was sentenced to 22 years and three months. The judge said he had “meticulously calculated” the execution, and it emerged Bruno had tried to kill himself twice while ­awaiting trial.

Investigating detective Edson Moreira said: “His acts were almost impossible to describe without breaking down. Images from the worst nightmare you could imagine.”

And with that, Bruno should have remained in prison — a gifted and talented footballer who threw it all away.

 Eliza Samudio with baby son Bruninho
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Eliza Samudio with baby son Bruninho

But last month a Supreme Court justice upheld his lawyers’ request to release him, with 15 years still to serve, so that he can await the outcome of his appeal.

A video has since surfaced which appears to show Bruno celebrating with family and friends, beaming while ­giving a thumbs-up to the camera.

But the announcement of his return to top-flight football has been met with fury in Brazil.

However, Bruno is still ­resolutely arguing his corner.

In February he told a Brazilian TV interviewer: “I want to make it clear that even if I stayed here and was given life imprisonment, for example, in Brazil, it would not bring the victim back.

“I paid dearly, it was not easy. This will help me as an experience. It has been a learning ­experience, not a punishment.”

Eliza’s mother, Sonia Fatima Moura, is looking after ­Bruninho, who is now seven.

Just yesterday she told how she refuses to tell him that his father killed the child’s mother.

She said: “The boy is clingy and still traumatised because of what he witnessed.

“I have said his father is in prison — but I cannot say why.”


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