Auditors: No creative accounting by Brazil's Rousseff

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Independent auditors hired by Brazil's Senate said in a report released Monday that suspended President Dilma Rousseff didn't engage in the creative accounting she was charged with at her impeachment trial.

For supporters of the embattled leader, the report underscores how fragile the case is.

But backers of her once ally-turned-enemy and acting President Michel Temer say that the document requested by the Senate's impeachment commission won't change her slim chances of returning to office.

FILE - In this June 14, 2016 file photo, suspended Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff speaks during a press conference for foreign journalists at the Alvorada residential palace, in Brasilia, Brazil. Auditors of Brazil¿s Senate published a report on Monday, June 27, 2016, clearing suspended Rousseff of some of the accusations made in her impeachment trial. According to three independent experts, Rousseff did not delay payments to state-run banks, which violates Brazil¿s fiscal laws and partially founds the impeachment proceedings. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres, File)

The report says Rousseff did not delay payments to state-run banks as charged. That would have violated Brazil's fiscal laws.

But the auditors did say that it is "without controversy" that Rousseff authored three 2015 decrees releasing additional credits without Congress' consent. The auditors said a fourth presidential decree seemed legal.

Two-thirds of the Senate voted in May to suspend Rousseff for allegedly breaking fiscal laws. Lawmakers don't have to follow the auditors' findings when they vote again, probably in the end of August.

In an interview with Radio Guaiba, Rousseff said the report shows there is no legal basis to impeach her and insisted she might order a plebiscite on Brazil's political future if she is returned to office.

"The auditors don't even say I signed those three decrees deceitfully, which is required in our laws," she said. "This impeachment is no more than an indirect election (of acting president Temer) in Congress."

Rousseff, who has presided over Brazil's worse recession in decades amid a sprawling corruption scandal at state-run oil giant Petrobras, was removed from office on May 12.