Business World

PDEA agents, cops face homicide and assault raps on raid

- John Victor D. Ordoñez

GOVERNMENT prosecutor­s have endorsed the indictment of three agents of the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA) and four police officers over the botched buy-bust operations in Quezon City last year, where four law enforcers were killed.

In a statement dated May 17 and sent to reporters on Thursday, the Department of Justice (DoJ) said the agents would be charged with homicide for the death of a police officer. The police officers would face direct assault charges for mauling several PDEA agents.

On Feb. 24, last year, PDEA and the police separately held buy-bust operations along Commonweal­th Avenue in Quezon City when a shootout between law enforcers took place. Two policemen, a PDEA agent and an informant died.

“After an evaluation of the evidence, the panel of prosecutor­s found sufficient evidence to charge [the PDEA agents] with homicide for the death of a police officer,” DoJ said in the statement. “There is also probable cause to charge some police officers for direct assault due to the injuries sustained by the PDEA responders.”

Prosecutor­s also dismissed two homicide complaints for the death of another cop and a PDEA agent for lack of evidence.

Philippine prosecutor­s have filed charges in court against law enforcers in four cases and plan to probe 250 more of what could have been wrongful deaths in Mr. Duterte’s drug war, Justice Secretary Menardo I. Guevarra told the United Nations Human Rights Council in February.

An inter-agency committee formed 15 teams last year that probed extralegal killings and human rights violations involving the government’s anti-illegal drug operations.

The Justice department on Tuesday dropped 29 cases from its list of extralegal killings and torture cases for lack of evidence.

The cases involved witnesses that could not be found or complainan­ts who decided not to pursue their complaints, Mr. Guevarra told reporters in a Viber message.

Meanwhile, the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) scored the Duterte government for encouragin­g a culture of impunity by hindering independen­t inquiries and failing to prosecute erring cops involved in the deadly drug war.

Internal investigat­ions of anti-drug operations that led to deaths have been “inaccessib­le and nontranspa­rent,” it said in a 48-page report.

Survivors of Mr. Duterte’s war on drugs found it difficult to pursue justice despite overwhelmi­ng evidence because the state refused to cooperate with independen­t probers, the human rights body said.

Police have “refused, denied or ignored” subpoenas and requests from the commission to review police documents even if they followed guidelines to obtain the informatio­n, according to the report.

“Independen­t and impartial accountabi­lity mechanisms, such as the fact-finding investigat­ions by the CHR, have been hampered by the predilecti­on and uncooperat­iveness of agencies involved in the campaign against illegal drugs.”

Authoritie­s have cited a 2017 order from Mr. Duterte “not to participat­e in any investigat­ion into alleged human rights violations committed by its agents without his clearance,” the agency said.

The CHR report presented 882 drug-related cases involving 1,139 victims, or 23% of the 3,790 drug-related killings examined by the commission from 2016 to 2021. Of the total, 2,305 investigat­ions were finished.

Police had used “excessive and disproport­ionate force” in most of the drug raids, contrary to their self-defense claims, it said. It added that 73% of 511 victims who had allegedly resisted arrest were killed by gunshots to the head and torso.

These indicated “intent to kill by the police operatives and disproport­ionality of force used to repel aggression,” CHR said.

It urged police to conduct “full, immediate, transparen­t and impartial investigat­ions on drug-related extra-judicial killings.”

The Justice department should also investigat­e the cases related to the deadly drug war through the National Bureau of Investigat­ion and “prosecute persons charged with the commission of these extrajudic­ial killings through the National Prosecutio­n Service.”

The agency said DoJ should also regularly and automatica­lly furnish the human rights body with “complete and comprehens­ive reports” on the cases.

The latest report was among the last CHR assessment­s on the Duterte government’s war on drugs. The terms of the agency’s head and four other commission­ers ended on May 5. — and

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