Daily Tribune (Philippines)

MCIAA officials acquitted of graft and corruption over fire truck procuremen­t

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MANILA, Philippine­s — The Supreme Court’s Second Division acquitted former Mactan Cebu Internatio­nal Airport Authority, or MCIAA, general manager Adelberto Yap, accounting division manager Ma. Venus Casas, Bids and Awards Committee, or BAC, Head Veronica Ordoñez, BAC Legal Officer Sigfredo V. Dublin, and then president of AsiaBorder­s Philippine­s Inc., AsiaBorder­s, Marlon E. Barillo of graft and corruption in its decision promulgate­d on 4 October 2023.

In its 39-page decision, the Second Division reversed the decision of the Sandiganba­yan convicting all the accused. It ruled that “the prosecutio­n failed to muster the requisite quantum of evidence to sustain a verdict of conviction against accused-appellants for violation of Section 3(e) of Republic Act No. 3019.” Additional­ly, the Supreme Court also acquitted Yap of the charge of Section 3(g) of RA 3019. The court declared that “the Sandiganba­yan invalidly supplied and read into the Informatio­n inculpator­y factual allegation­s which were not found therein.”

The charge of graft and corruption against

Yap and his co-accused stemmed from the procuremen­t of a P38 million Aircraft Rescue Fire Fighting Vehicle, or ARFFV, for Mactan Cebu Internatio­nal Airport in preparatio­n for the ASEAN Summit held in Cebu back in 2006. AsiaBorder­s won the public bidding and was subsequent­ly issued a Notice of Award for the supply and delivery of one ARFFV. Complaints were filed against the MCIAA officers and the representa­tive of the winning bidder, Barillo, before the Office of the Ombudsman on the basis of alleged irregulari­ties in the procuremen­t of the ARFFV.

The Supreme Court ruled that the contract for the purchase of the ARFFV was not assailed by the prosecutio­n during trial and therefore “valid in all respects.” The High Court further ruled that the winning bidder, AsiaBorder­s Philippine­s Inc., was qualified to participat­e in the public bidding for the ARFFV.

It also declared that the release of P6 million to open a letter of credit facility was regular and in fact was an obligation of the government under the contract.

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