The Philippine Star

Triad tattoo? Rody son invokes privacy

Paolo denies links to drug smuggling

- By MARVIN SY and PAOLO ROMERO

It would have set the record straight regarding his alleged drug links, but baring a tattoo on his back to a Senate panel as suggested by Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV would be a violation of his privacy, Davao City Vice Mayor Paolo Duterte said yesterday.

At the resumption of the Senate Blue Ribbon committee hearing on smuggling at the Bureau of Customs (BOC), Trillanes dared Duterte to prove to the panel that he does not have a Chinese triad tattoo.

While admitting he has a tattoo on his back, a visibly exasperate­d Duterte did not take Trillanes’ challenge that he show it to the panel – not even in an executive session.

“I invoke my right to privacy,” the vice mayor said, stressing he would not answer allegation­s based on hearsay.

Despite Duterte’s general unresponsi­veness during the hearing,

Trillanes expressed belief he was able to establish the vice mayor’s links to Chinese triads or crime rings as well as his family’s involvemen­t in drugs and smuggling activities in the country. Triad members are known for their color-coded tattoo of a dragon on their back.

Trillanes admitted he personally is not aware if Duterte has a triad tattoo on his back. The senator said the unverified informatio­n was supplied by a foreign source, which he did not name.

“It says that Vice Mayor Paolo Duterte is a member of the triad and the proof of his membership is the tattoo on his back,” Trillanes said. “That (tattoo) will explain everything and there’s competitio­n among drug syndicates.”

“That is the membership (requiremen­t). If you are a triad member, you have a tattoo on your back. And if you are a member of the triad, you are involved in all criminal activities,” Trillanes added.

Reacting to the allegation­s, Duterte was seen sighing and shaking his head.

Trillanes said he was able to show that illegal drugs, including cocaine, entered Davao City over the years despite claims by President Duterte that he knew all the goings-on in the city when he was still mayor and that he would never tolerate drug traffickin­g and abuse.

In December 2009, Trillanes noted that 16 kilograms of cocaine were seized at the Davao City wharf.

Five years later, on March 24, Trillanes said that P126 million worth of high-grade cocaine bars were discovered inside a container van at a shipyard in Davao.

A few days after the discovery, Trillanes said more bundles of cocaine were recovered from the same shipyard.

The following month, he said another P4.2 million worth of cocaine was seized from alleged drug pushers in Davao City.

“Duterte has been bragging that he is the king of Davao and that nothing happens in Davao without him knowing about it. So if you are a drug lord, would you even use Davao City as your transshipm­ent point?” Trillanes said.

Trillanes said the truth is Duterte did nothing to address the entry of illegal drugs into Davao City.

“I’ve shown the links and it’s very clear. There is a track record. Paolo Duterte was involved in smuggling before. So now with his links to the triad, that’s the final piece of the puzzle. That’s why the Philippine­s is being used as a transshipm­ent port of illegal drugs because Paolo Duterte is a member of the triad,” he said.

Trillanes also said he was able to show at yesterday’s hearing that the younger Duterte is connected to all of the players in the BOC who facilitate­d the release of more than P6 billion worth of shabu shipment from China.

Basis sought

Sen. Richard Gordon, chairman of the committee, asked Trillanes to make sure his allegation­s have basis.

“The chair would like to request respectful­ly that we should not make allegation­s here without any basis because triad is a very serious allegation and we should not abuse any of the witnesses here,” Gordon said.

Sen. Panfilo Lacson, for his part, asked Trillanes to disclose details of his informatio­n as well as his source, to which the latter said he would do so in a closed-door session with senators.

When later asked by reporters if he had any picture of the tattoo, Trillanes said it could be looked up in Google.

The young Duterte and presidenti­al son-in-law Manases Carpio attended the hearing after Trillanes had them summoned over his allegation­s that they were leaders of the so-called Davao group that facilitate­s smuggling in the BOC.

Carpio is the husband of Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio.

Broker Mark Taguba earlier testified before the panel that he had his shipments facilitate­d through the BOC with the help of some individual­s who identified themselves as representi­ng the Davao group.

Taguba not changing story

Taguba’s lawyer said the broker had not tagged Duterte and Carpio in smuggling activities. Taguba clarified yesterday that he was not changing any part of his testimony.

The National Bureau of Investigat­ion earlier tagged Taguba and several other individual­s in drug traffickin­g. Also charged were Chinese businessme­n Richard Chen, Kenneth Dong, Manny Li and other local brokers.

The drugs were recovered from two warehouses in Valenzuela City by members of the Customs Intelligen­ce and Investigat­ion Service last May 26 following a tip from authoritie­s in Xiamen, China where the shabu shipment had originated.

During the hearing, Trillanes presented photos taken from social media of Dong and the younger Duterte together to point out their links.

Also shown were panel photos of the vice mayor with businessma­n Charlie Tan. Trillanes also presented a picture of Tan with the President at Malacañang.

Tan, the senator pointed out, was among those mentioned by Lacson as being engaged in smuggling. Trillanes also cited reports on Tan’s involvemen­t in drug traffickin­g.

To further press his point, Trillanes presented bank records in 2015 showing that Duterte and Carpio had hundreds of millions of pesos in their accounts.

Rainier Madrid, Duterte’s legal counsel, said his client was close to giving in to Trillanes’ demand to show his tattoo, but he advised the vice mayor against it.

Trillanes only wanted to make a spectacle, Madrid said, adding he did not want the vice mayor to be humiliated.

 ?? GEREMY PINTOLO ?? SHOW MY TATTOO? NO WAY! Presidenti­al son Paolo Duterte and son-in-law Manases Carpio take their oath during the Senate probe yesterday on the P6.4-billion shabu from China. Inset shows the Davao vice mayor, who refused to reveal details about the...
GEREMY PINTOLO SHOW MY TATTOO? NO WAY! Presidenti­al son Paolo Duterte and son-in-law Manases Carpio take their oath during the Senate probe yesterday on the P6.4-billion shabu from China. Inset shows the Davao vice mayor, who refused to reveal details about the...

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