Eleições 2024: 84 eleitores e 36 candidatos foram detidos por crimes eleitorais
Balanço é do Ministério da Justiça e foi divulgado no começo da tarde


Redação Exame
Publicado em 6 de outubro de 2024 às 15h32.
O Ministério da Justiça informou que 84 eleitores e 36 candidatos foram detidos por crimes eleitorais neste domingo, 6, durante o primeiro turno das eleições municipais 2024.
Os números são do balanço mais recente, divulgado às 14h. Os crimes mais comuns cometidos são compra de votos e propaganda eleitoral irregular.
Regras eleitorais
De acordo com as regras do Código Eleitoral, os eleitores podem demonstrar suas preferências de voto de forma individual com o uso de bandeiras, broches, adesivos e camisetas, mas a reunião de pessoas ou o uso de instrumentos de propaganda que identifiquem partido, coligação ou federação é vedada pela legislação.
O uso de alto-falantes, amplificadores de som, realização de comício ou carreata, a persuasão do eleitorado e propaganda de boca de urna são considerados crimes
Também é proibido sair às ruas portando armas e munição de colecionadores, atiradores e caçadores nas 24 horas antes e nas 24 horas depois das eleições, inclusive para civis com porte ou licença estatal. As exceções são para agentes em serviço, como os que estejam trabalhando no policiamento ou na segurança de estabelecimentos penais e unidades de internação de adolescentes.
Veja fotos da votação das Eleições 2024

2 /10Tárcisio acompanhou Ricardo Nunes em votação das eleições municipais(Ricardo Nunes (MDB) e Tarcísio de Freitas (Republicanos) juntos no dia da votação do primeiro turno)

3 /10Sao Paulo city mayor and candidate for re-election Ricardo Nunes, of the Movimento Democratico Brasileiro (MDB), reacts after casting his his vote during the municipal elections first round, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on October 6, 2024. Brazilians go to the polls Sunday to elect mayors and councillors in more than 5,500 cities after a vitriolic, sometimes violent campaign two years after presidential elections that polarized Latin America's biggest country. (Photo by Nilton Fukuda / AFP)(Ricardo Nunes (MDB) votou na Zona Sul de São Paulo)

4 /10Sao Paulo city mayor and candidate for re-election Ricardo Nunes, of the Movimento Democratico Brasileiro (MDB), flashes the victory sign while casting his vote during the municipal elections first round, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on October 6, 2024. Brazilians go to the polls Sunday to elect mayors and councillors in more than 5,500 cities after a vitriolic, sometimes violent campaign two years after presidential elections that polarized Latin America's biggest country. (Photo by Nilton Fukuda / AFP)(Ricardo Nunes (MDB) aparece entre os primeiros colocados na pesquisa)
+ 6
Com informações de Agência Brasil