6 MAY 2026 · Danilo Souza Cavalcante is a Brazilian national whose story spans two countries, two alleged murders, a dramatic prison escape, and a sprawling manhunt that captured international attention. His case is defined by systemic failures in both Brazil and the United States, a motive rooted in silencing a witness, and a cat-and-mouse game that terrified a Pennsylvania community for two weeks.
### Early Life and First Alleged Murder in Brazil
Born on July 3, 1989, in the Brazilian state of Maranhão, Cavalcante was involved in legal issues from a young age[reference:0]. His most serious charge stemmed from November 5, 2017, when he allegedly shot his friend, 20-year-old Valter Júnior Moreira dos Reis, five times outside a restaurant in Figueirópolis, Tocantins[reference:1][reference:2]. The motive is believed to have been a dispute over a vehicle repair debt[reference:3][reference:4]. Although a warrant was issued for his arrest days later, state authorities failed to enter it into the national warrant system, a critical error[reference:5][reference:6]. In January 2018, Cavalcante boarded an international flight using his own passport, entered the United States illegally, and settled in the Philadelphia area[reference:7].
### The Murder of Deborah Brandão
After arriving in the U.S., Cavalcante began a tumultuous two-year relationship with fellow Brazilian immigrant Deborah Brandão, a 33-year-old single mother of two[reference:8]. The relationship was marked by extreme jealousy and domestic violence[reference:9]. In April 2020, Brandão filed a protection from abuse order against him, though it did not stop the escalating danger. On April 18, 2021, while at a barbecue at his home, Cavalcante grabbed a kitchen knife, drove to Brandão's home in Schuylkill Township, and confronted her in the driveway. In front of her two young children, ages 4 and 7, he stabbed her 38 times in the neck, chest, and back[reference:10][reference:11]. As he fled, he called his mother and sister to confess his actions[reference:12].
Prosecutors argued the murder was premeditated. They revealed that in the days before the killing, Brandão had discovered Cavalcante was wanted for murder in Brazil and threatened to report him to the police. According to the prosecution, Cavalcante killed her to silence her from revealing his fugitive status[reference:13][reference:14].
### Trial, Sentencing, and Apology
On August 16, 2023, a jury took less than 20 minutes of deliberation to find Cavalcante guilty of first-degree murder[reference:15][reference:16]. On August 22, he was sentenced to mandatory life in prison without parole, plus an additional 2½ to 5 years for possession of an instrument of crime[reference:17]. At his sentencing, Judge Patrick Carmody delivered a blistering rebuke, calling Cavalcante a “small man” for forcing Brandão’s young daughter to testify and relive her mother’s murder. Cavalcante offered a brief, slim apology: “I want to say I am sorry to them.”[reference:18].
### The Daring Escape and 14-Day Manhunt
Just nine days after his sentencing and while awaiting transfer to a state prison, Cavalcante executed a brazen daylight escape. At 8:51 a.m. on August 31, 2023, security cameras captured him “crab-walking” up a narrow space between two walls in an outdoor exercise yard. He ran across a roof, scaled a fence, and pushed through razor wire to reach the outside grounds[reference:19][reference:20]. The guard in a tower overlooking the yard did not see the escape and was later fired[reference:21][reference:22]. Shockingly, a fellow inmate may have acted as a lookout during his climb[reference:23][reference:24]. The escape was discovered an hour later, by which time Cavalcante was long gone.
What followed was a 14-day manhunt involving up to 500 local, state, and federal officers[reference:25]. Cavalcante proved to be a resourceful survivalist, evading capture despite numerous sightings. He survived on spring water and a watermelon he cracked open with his head[reference:26]. At times, he was so well-hidden in thick brush that officers walked within yards of his position[reference:27]. He slipped through the established search perimeter, broke into homes for food, changed his appearance, and stole both a van and a .22-caliber rifle with a scope and flashlight[reference:28][reference:29].
### Capture and Aftermath
The manhunt ended on the morning of September 13, 2023. After a burglar alarm and a thermal imaging aircraft detected a heat signature in the woods, a tactical team from Pennsylvania State Police and U.S. Border Patrol quietly surrounded Cavalcante. As he tried to crawl out of the underbrush, a four-year-old police dog named Yoda subdued him, and he was taken into custody [reference:30]. He was found still armed with the stolen rifle [reference:31]. A controversial group photo of dozens of officers posing with the captured fugitive was later defended by police as a photo of pride[reference:32].
Upon his return to custody, Cavalcante revealed he had considered surrendering due to the overwhelming police presence and that he had hidden his fecal matter to avoid being tracked by search dogs[reference:33]. He was transported to the state correctional institution SCI Greene to begin serving his life sentence. In August 2024, he pleaded guilty to escape charges for the 14-day flight, receiving an additional 15 to 30 years to be served consecutively to his life sentence[reference:34]. He also forfeited his right to appeal his murder conviction as a result of the escape[reference:35].
### The Lingering Case in Brazil
The case in Brazil has not been resolved. Due to the statute’s leniency, if convicted, Cavalcante would face a maximum of 12 to 30 years, a far contrast from his U.S. life sentence[reference:36][reference:37]. A Brazilian prosecutor has stated he is satisfied with Cavalcante remaining in U.S. custody[reference:38]. For the family of Valter dos Reis, however, there is no complete justice. His sister spoke of the relief at Cavalcante’s capture but lamented the painfully slow pace of Brazilian justice[reference:39].