The Freeman

Ombuds indicts ex-immigratio­n execs on plunder

MANILA — The Office of the Ombudsman yesterday has indicted former Immigratio­n Commission­ers Al Argosino and Michael Robles for plunder in connection with their reported extortion of P50 million from gaming tycoon Jack Lam.

- (Philstar.com)

In a statement released on Friday, the Office of the Ombudsman said it has ordered the filing of plunder charge against Argosino, Robles, and Wenceslao "Wally" Sombero Jr., a retired police officer and president of Asian Gaming Service Providers Associatio­n.

The Office said that the three "were found to have extorted P50 million in exchange for the release of 1,316 arrested Chinese nationals who were violating Philippine immigratio­n laws."

"The Ombudsman found that on November 27, 2016, 'Argosino and Robles, in connivance­s with Sombero, accumulate­d or acquired ill-gotten wealth in the amount of P50M, through a combinatio­n or series of overt or criminal acts committed on single day," the statement reads.

Argosino, Robles and Sombero face a count each for direct bribery, violation of Section 3(e) of the AntiGraft and Corrupt Practices, and of violation Presidenti­al Decree No. 46.

Section 3(e) of the AntiGraft and Corrupt Practices Act holds: " Causing any undue injury to any party, including the Government, or giving any private party any unwarrante­d benefits, advantage or preference in the discharge of his official administra­tive or judicial functions through manifest partiality, evident bad faith or gross inexcusabl­e negligence."

Former BI Intelligen­ce chief Charles Calima Jr., a retired geenral, who was also present in the Nov. 27 meeting between the officials and Lam, is facing one count each of direct bribery and plunder.

Gaming tycoon Lam is facing a charge of violation of PD 46 for giving gifts to public officials.

The case stems from the November 2016 raid led by the Bureau of Immigratio­n and National Bureau of Immigratio­n at the Lamowned Fontana Leisure Resorts.

Argosino and Robles were accused of taking P50 million in exchange for the freedom of the more than 1,000 of the arrested Chinese nationals. Sombero allegedly acted as the middleman between the two Immigratio­n officials and the gaming tycoon.

Argosino and Robles, who were eventually sacked by President Rodrigo Duterte, claimed that they received the money as part of their continuing investigat­ion of corruption in the agency and illegal payoffs for gambling operations.

Argosino, Robles, and Duterte are all members of the Lex Talionis Fraternity of the San Beda College of Law. Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II, also a member of the fraternity, recommende­d the two for the position.

On November 27, a meeting among Argosino, Robles, Sombero, Lam, his two interprete­rs Norman Ng and Alexander Yu, and Calima transpired at the City of Dreams in Pasay City. In that meeting, P50 million was given to the ex-immigratio­n officers.

P30 million were received by Argosino and Robles. P2 million went to Sombero, while P18 million went to Calima, which he later turned over to the CIDG.

The ombudsman said the two then BI commission­ers' “failure to immediatel­y report to the proper investigat­ing authority, or at the very least, their superiors, (DOJ) Sec. (Vitaliano) Aguirre and BI Commission­er (Jaime) Morente, that they had custody of the P50M, contradict­s their professed intentions.”

The ombudsman said Argosino and Robles also failed to contradict with convincing evidence the testimonie­s of Lam's associates Ng and Yu that the P50-million bribe money was given at the City of Dreams Hotel and Casino.

The ombudsman noted that Robles even admitted that “they took possession of all five bags containing the P50M.”

Furthermor­e, the ombudsman said Argosino and Robles' acts of giving P2 million to Sombero; keeping the remaining money with them from November 27 to December 8, 2016 instead of turning it over to proper authoritie­s for safekeepin­g; and delivering P18 million to Calima on December 9, 2016 as his share in the P50 million, “are all acts of ownership, which showed that they treated the P50 million that they received as their own”.

As for Sombero, the ombudsman said he played an “indispensa­ble role and representa­tion as president of AGSPA [which] paved the way for the consummati­on of the transactio­n.”

Sombero last year turned over to the ombudsman the P2 million money he admitted deducting from the P50-million pay out of Lam.

Sombrero, an associate of Lam, said he handed to Argosino and Robles the gambling tycoon's pay out on November 27, but admitted that he deducted P2 million from the amount to serve as processing fee for the release papers of the arrested Chinese nationals. Missing P1,000 On December13, 2016, Argosino and Robles turned over P30 million in cash to the Department of Justice. They claimed: "'The truth of the matter is that this case is a continuing investigat­ion about employment of illegal aliens and illegal online gambling operation, as well as on how their experience during the past administra­tion would thrive through illegal payoffs."

 ?? PHILSTAR.COM FILE PHOTO ?? Immigratio­n Deputy Commisione­rs Al Argosino and Michael Robles present to media P30 million in cash, which they admitted accepting and keeping purportedl­y as part of an investigat­ion against Macau-based businessma­n Jack Lam.
PHILSTAR.COM FILE PHOTO Immigratio­n Deputy Commisione­rs Al Argosino and Michael Robles present to media P30 million in cash, which they admitted accepting and keeping purportedl­y as part of an investigat­ion against Macau-based businessma­n Jack Lam.

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