Death of PM Gisele: reports indicate that the soldier was not pregnant nor drugged, but there were more bloodstains in the property
Reports from São Paulo's Technical-Scientific Police confirm that Military Police officer Gisele Alves was neither pregnant nor drugged at the time of her death, as investigators continue to probe the circumstances surrounding her fatal shooting.
Recent forensic reports from the São Paulo Technical-Scientific Police have revealed that Military Police officer Gisele Alves was not pregnant and had not been drugged before her tragic death. Further investigations uncovered more bloodstains throughout her apartment, raising questions about the events leading up to her demise on February 18. Gisele was discovered with a gunshot wound to the head in her home shared with her husband, Lieutenant Colonel Geraldo Neto, in the Brás area of central São Paulo.
The São Paulo Civil Police are actively investigating whether Gisele's death was a suicide or a case of femicide. Despite the toxicology report finding no evidence of drug or alcohol consumption, authorities are still awaiting supplementary results from the Medical Legal Institute (IML) and the Criminalistics Institute (IC) to complete their inquiry. These additional analyses are anticipated to shed light on the shooting incident, which has intrigued and troubled both the community and law enforcement for weeks.
Initially, the case was categorized as a suicide; however, emerging contradictions and newly discovered evidence have led investigators to re-evaluate this assumption. The increased scrutiny of the circumstances surrounding Gisele's death underscores the need for thorough investigative processes in cases involving the deaths of women, especially under potentially violent or suspicious contexts, reflecting broader societal issues surrounding gender violence in Brazil.