The Freeman

Senators chide Pharmally exec

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MANILA — Senators on Friday reminded a Pharmally Pharmaceut­ical Corp. executive accusing them of mistreatme­nt that it is the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee’s right to detain him for refusing to cooperate with its probe.

Pharmally corporate secretary Mohit Dargani was cited in contempt and ordered arrested along with his sister, Pharmally president Twinkle Dargani, by the panel on Tuesday after he again refused to submit documents subpoenaed by senators. Senate security has been unable to locate the siblings who were not in any of their three condominiu­ms that night.

With his whereabout­s still unknown, Dargani this morning released a statement to several media outlets, alleging that the Senate committee “failed to treat [them] justly” and is falsely accusing them “for political gain.”

“We tried our best to cooperate and respect them, but this was completely out of harmony with accepted legal standards,” he said.

“To cooperate in the Senate means they should submit the documents subject of subpoena duces tecum or as asked by a senator,” Senate President Vicente Sotto III said in response. “I suggest they read the [Philippine] Constituti­on!”

Meanwhile, Hontiveros in a separate statement reminded Dargani that Sen. Richard Gordon, the panel’s chairman, “is within his power to hold them in contempt.”

“I fully support the committee’s efforts to find the Dargani siblings,” she also said. “When their stories keep changing and are inconsiste­nt, they are disrespect­ing the [committee] and the Filipino people.”

Dargani and his sister were given weeks to submit the source documents subpoenaed by the committee. Their arrest was ordered on Tuesday shortly after the accountant who prepared the firm’s financial statement admitted that she never saw the source documents and was instead given a list to check.

His unwillingn­ess to submit the documents, even after this revelation, was the final straw for members of the panel.

After his detention was ordered along with his sister’s, Dargani left the room from which he was video conferenci­ng and was not heard from again for the rest of the hearing.

Another Pharmally executive, director Linconn Ong, has been detained in the Senate for weeks over his refusal to tell the committee how much money former presidenti­al economic adviser Michael Yang lent the firm.

Hontiveros: Why hide ‘basic’ documents?

“What we have been asking for are basic documentar­y records of their transactio­ns,” Hontiveros said. “These are documents that they are required to maintain for tax purposes. So where are they?”

“If Pharmally can’t document the cost of goods sold, their tax deficiency may be as much several billion pesos,” she said, echoing the suspicions of Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon who first sought a copy of the firm’s source documents.

“Based on the evidence filed in the [S] enate, they should be audited by the [Bureau of Internal Revenue].”

‘Another Pharmally executive missing following shock revelation’

Hontiveros also noted that this is the second time that a Pharmally executive cannot be found immediatel­y after an anomalous practice was uncovered by her office.

“First it was Ms. [Krizle Grace] Mago who confirmed a witness’ testimony on the tampering of the face shields, now it’s Mr. Dargani on overpricin­g.”

The senator bared Tuesday that Pharmally sold medical equipment to the Department of Transporta­tion at prices higher than the ones listed in the firm’s own catalog. This was confirmed by Ong and Dargani who claimed that the prices differed because they were volatile at the time.

The Commission on Audit shortly after said this was a “red flag” that merited further investigat­ion.

Last month, after confirming shocking testimony on the repackagin­g of “substandar­d” face shields from a Pharmally warehousem­an, Mago disappeare­d only to surface under House custody. Soon after, she disavowed her testimony at the Senate at a House hearing, saying it was a “pressured response.” - Bella Perez-Rubio/Philstar.

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