Eliza Samudio 〈Fresh | Walkthrough〉
When Eliza told Bruno she was keeping the baby, his reaction was not one of shock or negotiation. According to court testimony, it was one of war. He allegedly offered her money for an abortion. She refused.
For those who follow Brazilian football, the name Bruno Fernandes de Souza was once synonymous with promise. The 6’3” goalkeeper was a national champion with Flamengo, Brazil’s most popular club. He was a captain, a leader, and a star.
Eliza was shamed in the press before her death. Tabloids called her a gold-digger. They questioned her character. It was only after Bruno’s conviction that the narrative shifted to see her as a victim. Eliza Samudio
To hide the evidence, Bruno and his accomplices dismembered Eliza’s body. Her limbs and torso were separated. They fed parts of her body to the family’s Rottweilers to destroy the DNA. The remaining remains were allegedly encased in concrete and buried under a concrete floor. To this day, Eliza Samudio’s remains have never been recovered.
For two months, the baby—Bruno’s son—lived with a poor family, unaware that his mother had been fed to dogs. Eventually, authorities found him. The boy was returned to his maternal grandmother. In a move that disgusted the nation, Bruno (who is eligible for parole in semi-open regimes) recently won the right to have visits with his son, now a teenager. The boy, caught in a legal tug-of-war, was forced to meet the man who murdered his mother. The psychological damage is incalculable. The Legacy The case of Eliza Samudio is not just a crime story; it is a marker of culture. It highlighted "Rede da Impunidade" (Network of Impunity)—the way wealthy, famous men in Brazil have historically used power to erase women. When Eliza told Bruno she was keeping the
On June 7, 2010, prosecutors allege that Bruno snapped. He strangled Eliza with a plastic rope. But even that wasn’t the end.
After killing Eliza, Bruno did not kill his son. Instead, he forced Eliza’s cousin (who had been duped into helping) to take the then-four-month-old infant and abandon him in a favela. The cousin, however, had a change of heart. She left the baby at a home in the interior of Minas Gerais state. She refused
Eliza Samudio’s body was never found. But her story refuses to stay buried. If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic violence or threats, please contact a local helpline. In Brazil, call 180 (Central de Atendimento à Mulher).