SILVA, Angélica Borges; KLEISNCHMITT, Christopher Hermann; POSSAMAI, Patrícia Fernanda Macedo
Abstract:
This article analyzes the provisional enforcement of criminal sentences in the Brazilian
legal system, with particular attention to the constitutionality of the differentiated
treatment given to convictions rendered by the Jury Court. Drawing on the evolution of
the case law of the Federal Supreme Court, especially between 1991 and 2024, the
study examines the contrast between the presumption of innocence—which requires a
final and unappealable judgment for the commencement of sentence enforcement—and the sovereignty of jury verdicts, invoked as a basis for authorizing the immediate
enforcement of such decisions. Using qualitative, bibliographic, and documentary
research conducted through the deductive method, the article revisits landmark
decisions, including HC 126.292, ADCs 43, 44, and 54, and RE 1.235.340/SC, as well
as the amendments introduced by Law No. 13,964/2019. The analysis highlights the
instability of the jurisprudence and the existence of divergent doctrinal positions. It
concludes that, although the prevailing judicial understanding currently supports the
immediate enforcement of jury convictions based on the sovereignty of verdicts, this
distinction does not align with the constitutional principles governing criminal
proceedings, particularly the presumption of innocence.