The Philippine Star

Polong to accusers: Karma will get you

- – Paolo Romero, Christina Mendez

Davao City Vice Mayor Paolo Duterte yesterday denied allegation­s that he was involved in drug smuggling and warned that the “law of karma” would catch up with those trying to destroy him and his family.

President Duterte’s eldest son and his brotherin-law Manases Carpio testified for the first time before the Senate Blue Ribbon committee that is conducting an inquiry into the smuggling of P6.4 billion worth of shabu from China through the Bureau of Customs (BOC) last May.

Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV has accused the vice mayor and Carpio, husband of presidenti­al daughter Davao City Mayor Sara

Duterte-Carpio, of leading the so-called Davao group that facilitate­s smuggling at the BOC. “Once and for all I now have the time to deny any and all baseless allegation­s thrown against me,” the younger Duterte told the committee chaired by Sen. Richard Gordon.

Duterte said he accepted the invitation of the panel as a “gesture of respect” for the Senate and his appearance was “for the Filipino people and to my fellow Davaoeños whom I serve.”

Invoking his right against self-incriminat­ion, Duterte said: “I cannot answer the allegation­s based on hearsay.” Apparently referring to Trillanes, he said: “A senator once said that we are a family of murderers and I am untouchabl­e.”

“Every dog has his day. The law of karma will operate, especially to those with evil intent,” he said, quoting a text message from an official from Davao City.

Carpio, a lawyer by profession, also denied involvemen­t in smuggling activities, saying his being seen at the BOC was because he represents a client in a case involving the bureau.

Carpio lamented that he and his brother-in-law were being publicly crucified based on rumors and expressed willingnes­s to cooperate with the committee.

Malacañang downplayed the insinuatio­ns hurled by Trillanes that the younger Duterte is a member of an internatio­nal drug syndicate.

Although he cited the seriousnes­s of the senator’s allegation­s, presidenti­al spokesman Ernesto Abella said the accuser must provide convincing evidence to prove his claims. “That’s pretty drastic,” Abella said.

“I’m saying that, you know, those are very serious allegation­s. And he better… He needs to have some pretty substantia­l evidence to support that statement.” The hearing yesterday was a one-off appearance of the two before the Senate.

Inappropri­ate

During the hearing, Duterte was visibly irked and glowered at Trillanes, who asked him questions on his bank accounts.

“Your honor, do I have to answer this irrelevant question? This is not part of the inquiry,” Duterte said, turning to Gordon when Trillanes asked him if he was willing to issue a waiver to open his bank accounts.

Duterte invoked his right to privacy and denied Trillanes’ allegation­s that he had hundreds of millions of pesos as of end 2015 in his bank accounts.

Duterte’s legal counsel Rainier Madrid said Trillanes tried to make a spectacle and humiliate his client, but failed.

Trillanes claimed Duterte has a colored tattoo of a dragon on his back, indicating a bond with the Chinese triads.

Madrid said his client was close to acceding to Trillanes’ demand to show his tattoo but he advised against it.

He said he expected Trillanes to show something “explosive” as he promised the media days ago to pin down his client, but had nothing to show yesterday.

“I thought it would be an explosive show of witnesses, ‘I’ve many documents.’ Where are they? He only presented the body he wanted to see. Is he gay? It’s against my profession­al duty to let my client be exposed under those silly circumstan­ces,” Madrid told reporters.

When asked why he advised Duterte against exposing himself to dispute Trillanes’ allegation­s about the tattoo, Madrid said it would be inappropri­ate. “It’s a question of procedure, I don’t like my client to be laughed at by people who try to make (a fool) of him,” he said.

Madrid said Duterte was intent on ferreting out the truth in defending himself but the same was not the case for Trillanes. “He is not accusing, he is fishing for informatio­n because he doesn’t have informatio­n.

That’s how smart he is. Remember he is a military propagandi­st, he is a master of deception. Propagandi­st deception, you mislead with lies. And then based on lies you manipulate people’s minds,” Madrid said.

He said Duterte has no regrets and has no plans yet to get back legally at Trillanes and he won’t allow his client to be lured into the senator’s “propaganda game.”

Presidenti­al legal adviser Salvador Panelo said Trillanes was trying to distort the good image of President Duterte by putting his son and son-in-law in the crosshairs of unsubstant­iated allegation­s during the Senate inquiry.

He described Trillanes as “an epitome of falsehood in this country” and a “walking nonsense” for trying to link the brothers-in-law with illegal activities. “(Trillanes) has engaged in malicious propaganda against the President through his son-in-law and the son.

He produces documents obviously he prepared himself because he cannot point the source… this is the same strategy he made against the President during the campaign,” Panelo said. Madrid agreed with the observatio­n that Trillanes’ target was not Paolo but his father, who turned down the senator’s overtures last year to be his runningmat­e.

He noted that Trillanes again brandished bank records of members of the Duterte family that he “hacked.” They were the same records, Madrid said, that Trillanes presented before and after the elections in his continuing attempt to discredit the President.

“I told him if you can’t divulge your sources that means you are a hacker. He violated the law. He’s a criminal. Now he wanted again to resort to – he did not even disclose where he got his informatio­n, why will we dignify something questionab­le, whose sources he can’t reveal?” Madrid remarked.

Madrid said Trillanes should have authentica­ted the bank records to give his allegation­s credence. Abella said the appearance of the younger Duterte and Carpio before the Senate “demonstrat­es that both gentlemen are willing and ready to face malicious allegation­s intended to impugn their character and credibilit­y.”

“The President has said on numerous occasions that he would not interfere and he believes that both Vice Mayor Duterte and attorney Carpio can hold their own at the Senate,” Abella said.

 ??  ?? After her husband and brother faced the Senate yesterday, Davao Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio posted this message.
After her husband and brother faced the Senate yesterday, Davao Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio posted this message.

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