Police arrest three suspects in bus arson linked to prison gang in Belo Horizonte

Bus driver threatened at gunpoint during the attack; public transportation service disrupted and electrical grid affected in the metropolitan area.
This isn't about you, the man said, before setting the bus on fire
A suspect's words to the bus driver moments before the arson, revealing the attack was directed at someone else entirely.

Na noite de terça-feira, em Vespasiano, na região metropolitana de Belo Horizonte, um ônibus foi incendiado por homens encapuzados que deixaram uma carta endereçada a um juiz responsável por uma penitenciária local — assinada pelo grupo 'BDM'. O ato não foi vandalismo ao acaso: foi uma mensagem calculada, enviada de dentro do sistema prisional para fora dele, usando o espaço público como palco e um trabalhador inocente como primeiro destinatário. Dois suspeitos foram presos na quarta-feira e confessaram o crime; a investigação agora tenta compreender até onde chegam os fios que ligam as grades às chamas.

  • Três homens encapuzados abordaram um motorista de ônibus à mão armada, entregaram uma carta ameaçadora e atearam fogo ao veículo, derrubando a energia elétrica de um bairro inteiro.
  • A carta, assinada pelo grupo prisional 'BDM', acusava o juiz responsável pela Penitenciária Antônio Dutra Ladeira de violar direitos de detentos — transformando um crime de rua em um ato político vindo de dentro do sistema carcerário.
  • Em menos de 24 horas, a Rotam prendeu dois dos suspeitos em Justinópolis, apreendendo armas e drogas; ambos confessaram e revelaram quem teria ordenado o ataque.
  • Um terceiro suspeito permanece foragido, e a Polícia Civil investiga se a ação foi diretamente coordenada pela facção ou se reflete tensões mais difusas dentro da unidade prisional.
  • O sindicato dos rodoviários condenou o ataque, mas o recado já havia sido entregue: as disputas travadas atrás das grades podem alcançar — e interromper — a vida cotidiana da cidade.

Na terça-feira à noite, três homens encapuzados chegaram a um ponto de ônibus em Vespasiano de moto e a pé, carregando combustível e uma carta. Um deles embarcou no ônibus da Linha 634, apontou uma arma para o motorista e entregou o envelope. "Isso não é com você", disse o homem. Em seguida, atearam fogo ao veículo. As chamas se espalharam rápido o suficiente para derrubar a energia elétrica do bairro.

Quando os investigadores recolheram a carta carbonizada, descobriram que ela era endereçada ao juiz responsável pela Penitenciária Antônio Dutra Ladeira, em Ribeirão das Neves. O texto denunciava violações aos direitos dos detentos e estava assinado com a sigla "BDM" — o Bonde dos Malucos, facção prisional conhecida na região metropolitana.

Na quarta-feira à noite, a Rotam localizou dois dos suspeitos em Justinópolis, também em Ribeirão das Neves. Com eles, foram apreendidos duas armas e entorpecentes. Os dois confessaram a participação no incêndio e indicaram quem teria dado a ordem. Um terceiro envolvido segue foragido.

As autoridades estaduais investigam agora se o ataque foi uma ação diretamente coordenada pela facção ou uma manifestação mais difusa de tensões internas à unidade. A Polícia Civil conduz as apurações. O departamento penitenciário afirmou que aguardará os resultados antes de decidir sobre uma revisão interna — e fez questão de destacar que a penitenciária passou por reformas recentes e é regularmente inspecionada.

O sindicato dos rodoviários condenou o crime e expressou confiança na Justiça. Mas o estrago já estava feito: um trabalhador havia sido ameaçado, um bairro ficara sem luz, e uma mensagem havia sido entregue — deixando claro que os conflitos dentro das prisões podem, quando querem, apagar as luzes lá fora.

On Tuesday night, three hooded men arrived at a bus stop in Vespasiano, just outside Belo Horizonte, carrying fuel and a message. They came by motorcycle and on foot. One of them boarded the Route 634 bus—the line that runs between Estação Vilarinho and Nova Iorque—and confronted the driver at gunpoint. The man handed over a letter. "This isn't about you," he said, according to the driver's account to police. Then they set the bus on fire.

The flames spread quickly enough to knock out power to the surrounding neighborhood. The electrical grid went dark. Firefighters arrived and contained the blaze. When investigators collected the charred letter from the scene, they found it was addressed to a judge—the magistrate overseeing the Antônio Dutra Ladeira prison in Ribeirão das Neves, also in the metropolitan area. The letter made accusations about violations of inmates' rights. It was signed "BDM," shorthand for "Bonde dos Malucos," a prison gang.

By Wednesday night, the Rotam—the metropolitan tactical police unit—had arrested two of the three men. They found them in Justinópolis, in Ribeirão das Neves, and recovered two firearms and drugs from their possession. A third man was also detained at the scene, though he had no connection to the bus attack. The two primary suspects confessed to their role in the arson and, according to state security officials, identified who had ordered them to carry it out. A third suspect remains at large.

The attack was not random. It was a calculated message from inside the prison system to a judge overseeing one of its facilities. The letter itself became evidence of intent—a deliberate escalation from words to fire, from complaints to threats. The driver, who had done nothing wrong, became the messenger's first audience. The bus, a piece of public infrastructure, became the medium.

State authorities are now working to determine whether the arson was a direct action ordered by the prison gang or something more loosely connected to grievances within the system. The Civil Police are leading the investigation. The penitentiary department says it will wait for those findings before deciding whether to launch its own internal review. Officials noted that the Antônio Dutra Ladeira facility has undergone recent health infrastructure renovations and is regularly inspected by oversight bodies—a defensive posture that suggests awareness of the underlying tensions.

The bus company's union condemned the attack and expressed confidence that those responsible would face justice. But the damage was already done. A driver had been threatened. A neighborhood had lost power. And a letter had been delivered, making clear that the grievances of men behind bars could reach out into the city itself. The third suspect is still being sought. The investigation continues.

The suspects confessed to their participation and identified who ordered the attack
— Secretaria de Estado de Justiça e Segurança Pública de Minas Gerais
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why would a prison gang burn a bus? It seems disconnected from their actual power base.

Model

It's not disconnected at all. The letter was the point. They needed to reach a specific judge, and they needed her to understand they could act outside the prison walls. The bus was the delivery mechanism.

Inventor

But they could have just sent the letter through a lawyer or a visitor.

Model

A letter in an envelope gets filed away. A bus on fire gets immediate police response, media attention, and a judge who knows her name is on a document recovered from a crime scene. It's intimidation dressed as protest.

Inventor

The driver—did he know what was happening?

Model

Not really. He was told it wasn't personal, then the bus burned. He was the first witness to a message meant for someone else entirely.

Inventor

What happens to the third suspect?

Model

That's the open question. He's still out there, and he knows the other two have confessed and named who ordered the attack. That creates pressure.

Inventor

On him?

Model

On everyone. On the gang, on the judge, on the authorities trying to figure out how deep this goes.

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