[7] On August and September 2017, the Deputy voted against the reports that rejected two complaints made by the then Prosecutor General Rodrigo Janot against president Temer.
[11] To the RBS TV, Lorenzoni assumed the irregularity, claiming that he "couldn't" declare the money to the Electoral Justice, and that the cipher would be less than the R$200,000[a] cited by Ricardo Saud.
[14] In 2016, Lorenzoni was part of the committee that turned the ten anti-corruption measures proposed by the Federal Public Prosecutor's Office into law.
Lorenzoni's third report on 22 November decreased the number of measures from 17 to 12, removing those that mentioned popular lawsuits and international cooperation pleas.
[20] In October 2016, Lorenzoni supported the decision of the Supreme Federal Court of allowing the prison of defendants convicted in second instance, and said the will include it among the anti-corruptions measures.
[21][22] In November 2016, Lorenzoni opposed "caixa 2" amnesty,[23] along with Deputies Fernando Francischini (SD-PR),[23] Alessandro Molon (REDE-RJ),[24] Vanderlei Macris (PSDB-SP),[25] Carlos Sampaio (PSDB-SP),[25] Joaquim Passarinho (PSD-PA),[25] and Senators Alvaro Dias (PV-PR)[26] and Ana Amélia Lemos (PP-RS),[27] listening to the claims of the civil society that signed for the approval of the 10 Anti-corruption Measures, and of the Public Prosecutor's Office, author of the bill.
[23] In November 2016, in an interview in the Brazilian TV show Roda Viva, Deputy Lorenzoni reaffirmed his opposition to legal immunity.