[3] He served as district attorney of the Public Prosecutor's Office of São Paulo from 1973 to 1976, when he joined the magistrate career as law judge.
[4] After retiring as desembargador, he was nominated in January 2016 as Secretary of Education of the State of São Paulo by Governor Geraldo Alckmin, more than 40 days after the leaving of Herman Voorwald, who resigned due to the suspension of the school reorganization process.
[9] In 2003, while President of the extinct Criminal Court, he conceded a habeas corpus to Gugu Liberato, so he wouldn't be indicted of press crime and threat in the interview with fake members of the First Command of the Capital.
[10] In interview to Jornal da Cultura in 2014, desembargador Nalini, commenting on the budget forecast of R$ 1 billion (approximately US$425.5 million in 2014) for the concession of housing assistance for judges, acknowledged that the assistance "disguises a subsidy increase" and affirmed that the measure would be justifiable because, among other reasons, the judges need to buy many suits and "[we] can't go to Miami every time to buy suits".
In the text, the Secretary explicits his view of market and society, putting himself on the right-wing of the political spectrum and choosing the economic liberalism as an ideal (notion that the State should only provide security and justice).