Eliza Samudio Review

It was a lie.

She was held captive for several days. She was tortured. She was beaten.

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 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.

In 2013, Bruno was sentenced to 22 years and 3 months for homicide, concealment of a corpse, and kidnapping. He was stripped of his freedom and his hero status. The most haunting part of the story is the baby. It was a lie

The case went cold until one of Bruno’s accomplices, a former police officer named Marcos Aparecido dos Santos (known as "Bola"), was arrested for an unrelated crime. He broke. He confessed everything.

On June 4, 2010, Eliza drove to Rio de Janeiro. She left her son with a friend. She was told Bruno would take her to a house to meet his lawyers. Instead, she was taken to a rented shack in the suburb of Vargem Grande. According to the confession of his accomplices (notably his cousin, Bruno’s version of events shifted constantly), the moment Eliza entered the shack, the nightmare began. She was beaten

When the police finally arrested Bruno, he was at his luxury apartment, playing video games with his new girlfriend. The arrogance was stunning. The trial became a national obsession. Brazil watched in horror as text messages from Bruno were read aloud: "I want her dead," he wrote to an accomplice.