Philippine Daily Inquirer

Revilla allowed to secure TROfrom SC vs plunder trial

- By Vince F. Nonato @VinceNonat­oINQ

The Sandiganba­yan has given former Sen. Bong Revilla the chance to secure a temporary restrainin­g order (TRO) from the Supreme Court to stop the trial of his P224.5-million plunder case—but only for three weeks.

The defense was supposed to begin presenting its evidence to counter the Ombudsman’s allegation­s on Thursday, but the court’s First Division deferred it to Feb. 15, “in the interest of justice.”

“Accused Revilla should present his evidence on Feb. 15, 2018, in the event that no (TRO) is issued by the Supreme Court,” read the order signed by Associate Justices Efren N. de la Cruz, Edgardo M. Caldona and Alex L. Quiroz.

Presentati­on of evidence

In case Revilla’s camp could not present its evidence, the court ordered his chief of staff, Richard Cambe, and alleged pork barrel scam mastermind Janet Lim-Napoles to be ready to present theirs.

Former Solicitor General Estelito Mendoza, Revilla’s lawyer, said he was “optimistic” that the high court would grant their plea for an injunction.

Revilla requested the postponeme­nt after they filed on Jan. 15 a petition asking the high court to reverse the Sandiganba­yan’s Dec. 7 denial of his motion for leave to file a demurrer against the prosecutio­n’s evidence.

Nonbailabl­e case

Revilla’s petition included a plea for an injunction to indefinite­ly stop the Sandiganba­yan proceeding­s and allow Revilla to post bail on the nonbailabl­e case for humanitari­an reasons.

The denial of the motion for leave meant Revilla risked waiving his right to present his evidence if he continued to challenge the sufficienc­y of the Ombudsman’s plunder evidence. Such a default could theoretica­lly result in his conviction.

But Revilla’s lawyers insisted before the Supreme Court that the prosecutio­n was unable to specify the “overt criminal acts” required by the plunder law and that his endorsemen­t of dubious nongovernm­ent organizati­ons allegedly controlled by Napoles to implementh­is pork barrel projects was not a criminal act.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines