Sun.Star Cebu

SELLING BROKEN PROMISES

3 suspects, who work for a recruitmen­t agency with an expired permit, arrested during an entrapment conducted by CIDG

- JOHANNA O. BAJENTING / Reporter @JOBajentin­g / EOB

The agency was monitored since October 2016 when they advertised in a local newspaper ATTY. REY BUENAFE Chief Legal of Dole 7

Aspiring applicants are warned against illegal recruitmen­t agencies after operatives from the Criminal Investigat­ion and Detection Group (CIDG) 7 caught three suspects in Barangay Pusok, LapuLapu City yesterday morning.

Supt. Fermin Armendarez, chief of the CIDG-Metro Cebu, said that they conducted an entrapment against personnel of Philjobs Manpower Services, a local recruitmen­t agency.

"This is large-scale illegal recruitmen­t. When our police decoy posed as an applicant to be a driver, they issued receipts under the name of Philjobs, which was not registered in the Department of Labor and Employment (Dole)," Armendarez said.

The suspects were identified as Heide Geraldez, 35; Edmund Sayloon, 33; and Ruth Arcega, 34. They all hail from Mandaue City.

Dole 7 filed a complaint against the three for issuing receipts and making applicants pay P350 up to P800 using an expired permit.

"The agency was monitored since October 2016 when they advertised in a local newspaper. When we verified them, their authority to recruit already expired in 2014," said Atty. Rey Buenafe, chief legal of the Dole 7.

Buenafe said they have yet to verify if the applicants who sought the services of Philjobs were given actual jobs because the complaints they received accused the agency of asking for certain amounts from applicants without giving them the positions they applied for.

The agency has invited Felipe Retobado Jr., Philjobs' registered owner, for questionin­g.

Buenafe said that they are processing the closure order against Philjobs and they expect to implement it this week.

Geraldez, Sayloon and Arcega will be charged with violating Republic Act 8042, which penalizes persons who engage in illegal recruitmen­t. It is a non-bailable offense.

Buenafe encouraged other victims to file a formal complaint at their office.

Dole 7 Director Exequiel Sarcauga said that illegal recruitmen­t is a criminal offense, but it's up to the CIDG to file additional charges, if there are any.

Sarcauga said that based on their records, Philjobs was registered as a recruitmen­t agency, but its permit expired in 2012 yet. It reportedly continued to supply job applicants to a registered recruitmen­t agency.

“It seems they raked huge sums of money since 2012 because the labor laws compliance officers, who validated and evaluated the complaints, found out that it collected an average of P11,000 per day from unsuspecti­ng job applicants, several of whom were not hired,” he said.

 ?? SUNSTAR FOTO / ARNI ACLAO ?? "LARGE-SCALE ILLEGAL RECRUITMEN­T". Suspects Heide Geraldez, Edmund Sayloon and Ruth Arcega accepted payments from job applicants and issued receipts under the name of Philjobs, which is not registered with Dole 7.
SUNSTAR FOTO / ARNI ACLAO "LARGE-SCALE ILLEGAL RECRUITMEN­T". Suspects Heide Geraldez, Edmund Sayloon and Ruth Arcega accepted payments from job applicants and issued receipts under the name of Philjobs, which is not registered with Dole 7.

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