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This article aims to examine the perspective of the Court of Justice of Pará, the Brazilian host state of 2025 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP 30), regarding the right to ethnic self-recognition of Indigenous persons accused of committing criminal infringement. As a theoretical framework, the study draws on decolonial thought, engaging in an interdisciplinary dialogue between social sciences and law, particularly to support the analysis of epistemic aspects of colonialism present in judicial decision-making. This is a qualitative, empirical, and jurisprudential study employing content analysis as its methodological approach. The findings indicate that, in general, the Court of Justice of Pará adopts a static perspective on Indigenous identity, stemming from the reproduction of elements of epistemic colonialism.