He took his cellphone and smashed it to pieces
Em uma tarde de maio, as forças policiais de Tupã convergiram sobre uma residência em Vila Lahoz para cumprir um mandado de prisão preventiva contra um homem de 32 anos apontado como integrante de alto risco de uma facção criminosa. A operação, batizada de 'Operação Disneylândia' e coordenada pelo GAECO, transcorreu sob controle — até o momento em que o suspeito, diante da inevitabilidade da prisão, resistiu, recusou as algemas e destruiu o próprio celular com as mãos. Esse gesto, seja ele cálculo ou desespero, tornou-se o símbolo mais duradouro de uma tarde em que a lei e a resistência se encontraram frente a frente.
- Um homem identificado como membro de alto risco de facção criminosa foi alvo de mandado de prisão preventiva cumprido por múltiplas unidades táticas em Vila Lahoz, Tupã.
- No momento da voz de prisão, o suspeito recusou as algemas e destruiu seu celular com as próprias mãos — ato registrado oficialmente como resistência ativa.
- A presença de advogado e da mãe do suspeito no local não impediu o confronto físico, que exigiu a intervenção da força tática para conter o homem.
- Após avaliação médica na UPA de Tupã, o detido foi transferido para a Penitenciária de Pracinha, onde permanece à disposição da Justiça.
Na tarde de uma terça-feira de maio, agentes do GAECO e diversas unidades policiais cercaram uma residência na Rua Abel Ferreira Leite, em Vila Lahoz, Tupã, para cumprir um mandado de prisão preventiva contra R.D.F., 32 anos, descrito pelas autoridades como integrante de alto risco de uma facção criminosa. A operação recebeu o nome de 'Operação Disneylândia' e mobilizou sargentos, soldados, oficiais e uma célula tática completa.
A mãe do suspeito abriu o portão para os policiais, e um advogado estava presente. Por um momento, tudo correu dentro do esperado — até que a voz de prisão foi dada. O homem resistiu, recusou as algemas e, num gesto que os agentes documentaram como desafio ou desespero, destruiu o próprio celular com as mãos durante o tumulto, antes de ser contido pela força tática.
Após atendimento médico na UPA local, foi transferido para a Penitenciária de Pracinha, onde aguarda a decisão judicial. O celular partido, reduzido a fragmentos durante a luta, ficou registrado nos autos como o momento mais visível de uma operação que, no restante, transcorreu sob controle das autoridades.
On a Tuesday afternoon in late May, police in Tupã moved on a house in Vila Lahoz to execute a preventive detention warrant. The target was a 32-year-old man identified by the initials R.D.F., someone the authorities described as a high-risk member of a criminal faction. The operation, called "Operação Disneylândia" and coordinated by GAECO, required multiple patrol units, tactical cells, and a full perimeter around the residence on Rua Abel Ferreira Leite.
When the officers arrived, the suspect's mother opened the gate to let them in. An attorney representing the man was present during the operation. Everything appeared to be proceeding as planned—until the officers informed him of the warrant and placed him under arrest.
The moment the voice of arrest was given, the man resisted. He refused to be handcuffed. And then, in what officers documented as an act of defiance or desperation, he took his cellphone in his hands and smashed it to pieces. The destruction of the device happened during the struggle, before he was finally subdued by the tactical units on scene.
Once contained, he was transported to the UPA medical facility in Tupã for evaluation. After clearance, he was moved to the Pracinha Penitentiary, where he remained in custody pending judicial determination of his case. The operation involved a substantial police presence: a sergeant and soldier led the initial contact, supported by a lieutenant, multiple officers, and a tactical force unit that included a subtenent and three additional personnel.
The destruction of the phone—deliberate, physical, done with bare hands—stands as the most visible moment of resistance in an otherwise controlled operation. Whether it was an attempt to eliminate evidence, a gesture of protest, or simply the act of a man confronting the reality of his arrest, the broken device became part of the official record. He remains in the penitentiary system now, his case moving through the courts.
Notable Quotes
The suspect was considered of high periculosity and identified as a member of a criminal faction— Polícia Militar statement
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does the phone matter enough to mention in the official report?
Because it suggests he was trying to destroy something—evidence, contacts, records. The deliberateness of it, done with his own hands in front of officers, says something about what he thought he had to lose.
Was this a violent arrest?
Not in the way you might think. He resisted, refused the cuffs, broke the phone. But the officers had tactical units, a perimeter, his mother's cooperation. The resistance was real but contained. The phone-breaking was the loudest thing that happened.
Why mention the attorney was there?
Transparency, probably. The police are documenting that the arrest was lawful, witnessed, conducted properly. The presence of his lawyer is part of showing they followed procedure.
What happens now?
He's in Pracinha Penitentiary waiting for the courts to decide his fate. The preventive detention is temporary—the judiciary will determine if he stays, if charges stick, what comes next. For now, he's in the system.
Do we know what he actually did?
No. The report only says he's a high-risk member of a criminal faction. The specific charges, the evidence—that's not in this record. We know he was wanted enough to warrant a multi-unit operation. That's all we have.