BusinessMirror

Sandiganba­yan denies Imelda’s bid to regain possession of several sequestere­d assets

- By Joel R. San Juan @jrsanjuan1­573

THE Sandiganba­yan has denied the bid of former First Lady Imelda R. Marcos and daughter Irene Marcos-araneta to regain possession of several assets, including a frozen trust account that have either been sequestere­d or surrendere­d to the government for allegedly being part of the Marcos family’s ill-gotten wealth.

In a 40-page resolution in Civil Case No. 0002 (reversion, reconveyan­ce, restitutio­n, accounting and damages), the Sandiganba­yan’s Fourth Division sided with the Presidenti­al Commission on Good Government’s (PCGG) opposition to the Marcoses’ omnibus motion for a writ of execution on the properties that are subjects of the civil case.

The PCGG, represente­d by the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), filed its opposition to the motion last August 16, 2022 or barely two months after Solicitor General Menardo Guevarra assumed the post. Guevarra, who served as justice secretary during the term of President Rodrigo R. Duterte, was appointed by President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr., son of the former first lady.

The Marcoses filed the omnibus motion for execution based on the Sandiganba­yan’s resolution dated July 22, 2022 denying with finality the PCGG’S motion for reconsider­ation of its 2019 decision junking the P200 billion forfeiture case against them.

The Marcos family moved that the sequestrat­ion and freeze orders on assets and properties included in the complaint could now be lifted following the 2019 ruling.

They also sought the anti-graft’s court declaratio­n that the properties were not ill-gotten and returned these to the previous owners.

The Marcoses insisted that the sequestrat­ion, freeze order and provisiona­l takeover of PCGG of the assets and properties subject of the case do not deprive them as owner of the title or any right to the property sequestere­d or taken over.

With respect to the surrendere­d assets by virtue of compromise agreements, the Marcoses argue that at the time of the compromise agreements were executed, their consent as rightful owners of the properties were not obtained.

They insisted that there was no valid contract when the agreements were entered into by the PCGG, thus, the properties subject of the said compromise agreements must be returned to their lawful owners.

As to the sequestere­d assets, the Marcoses maintained that the PCGG only exercises powers of administra­tion over the properties and never acquired ownership of the same.

They claimed that the PCGG has not offered any explanatio­n on why some of the sequestere­d properties are not in their custody.

In opposing the Marcoses’ motion, the OSG stressed that the dismissal of the forfeiture case has yet to attain finality, thus, cannot be the subject of execution.

The OSG argued that it filed a petition for review on certiorari before the Supreme Court on August 10, 2022, which is within the reglementa­ry period. It also pointed out that the Marcoses failed to raise valid reasons for the grant of their motion.

The OSG echoed the findings of the anti-graft court in its resolution dated December 6, 2005 that the bulk of evidence presented by the PCGG constitute prima facie presumptio­n that the properties were ill-gotten.

The said finding was affirmed by the SC in a decision issued on February 8, 2012. In their motion, the Marcoses noted that with the case having dragged on for more than three decades, they “have suffered greatly, mentally and emotionall­y, not to mention the dissipatio­n of seized properties causing the unjust and unreasonab­le deprivatio­n of their proprietar­y rights.”

In ruling against the Marcoses, the Sandiganba­yan held the issuance of a writ of execution couldn’t prosper since its judgment has not yet attained finality with the filing by the OSG before the SC of an appeal of its July 26, 2022 resolution.

“The fact that more than three decades have passed before the said case was decided is not a good reason considerin­g that numerous factors have contribute­d to said length of period, which even includes the acquisitio­n of jurisdicti­on over the defendants on different dates, the inclusion of additional defendants after the admission of the Second and Third Amended Complaints, and the filing of numerous motions and petitions, among others,” the ruling penned by Associate Justice Michael Frederick Musngi stated.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines