Founder’s Briefs: An occasional series where Mongabay founder Rhett Ayers Butler shares analysis, perspectives and story summaries. In the tangled thickets of Brazil’s Amazon, a place known as much for its impenetrable forest as its opaque networks of corruption, Lúcio Flávio Pinto has spent nearly six decades cutting a solitary trail. For most of that time, he did so with little more than a pen, a dogged sense of duty, and a refusal to be bought, bullied, or silenced. That he is still alive is as much a defiance of probability as it is of power. Lúcio Flávio Pinto at home in 2012. Photo courtesy of Lúcio Flávio Pinto. Born in Santarém in 1949, Pinto began reporting at 16. The first article he published—an anniversary piece on the end of World War II—appeared on the front page of A Provínc
Lúcio Flávio Pinto: The Brazilian reporter who wouldn’t be bought or silenced

87