The Philippine Star

Who’s that boy?

- ANA MARIE PAMINTUAN

Considerin­g the sensitivit­y of this case, with public suspicion focused on the Philippine National Police, it would be best for the PNP to leave the forensic analysis of the cadaver found in Nueva Ecija to another agency.

At this point, with even the genitals of the cadaver now being subjected to minute scrutiny, forensic examinatio­n should be handed over to the University of the Philippine­s DNA Analysis Laboratory of the Natural Sciences Research Institute. Maybe the US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion can even be tapped for assistance.

The corpse is still there, so DNA can be obtained. Perhaps Reynaldo de Guzman, a.k.a. Kulot, also has dental records on file in his Pasig school.

When specimens for testing are taken, all interested parties must be present. No group can simply foist test results on the public and vouch for their authentici­ty. Relatives of the deceased, lawyers, and neutral forensic experts must be present when DNA samples are collected from the corpse and De Guzman’s biological parents Lina and Eduardo Gabriel.

The representa­tives of all concerned parties must be present as the samples are transporte­d to the laboratory for analysis; there must be no room for switching or contaminat­ion of the specimens.

The Public Attorney’s Office (PAO) openly wondered why the PNP conducted a DNA analysis of a cadaver that had already been identified and claimed by the supposed parents, when no request for such a test was made by the aggrieved party. Forensic examinatio­n of crime victims is mandatory and standard operating procedure for the PNP, but DNA testing is not. The speed by which the DNA test results were released is also impressive.

This confusion could have been minimized if the PNP had asked a PAO representa­tive to be present when the samples were taken from the cadaver and from the parents of De Guzman, who didn’t even know what a DNA test was.

* * * Yesterday the confusion moved to the genitals of the cadaver. De Guzman, according to some of his brothers, was circumcise­d while the cadaver was not. PAO officials countered that their forensic analysis in fact showed a circumcise­d corpse, although there was foreskin overgrowth – probably what is locally called sungaw. This can be the result of circumcisi­on at the hands of the neighborho­od barber, which is cheap and still common in this country, with the cut being healed by regular daubing with pureed guava leaves.

When was the last time the siblings saw their brother Kulot’s penis?

Of course we can’t rule out the possibilit­y that the PNP could be telling the truth. All the more reason for the PNP not to worry about subjecting the cadaver and De Guzman’s parents to another DNA test by an independen­t agency – one that is not influenced by a presidenti­al declaratio­n that the killings of teenagers in recent weeks could be the handiwork of narco politician­s and other drug dealers out to “sabotage” the campaign against illegal drugs.

The National Bureau of Investigat­ion had conducted its own autopsy of the cadaver. It can send its own representa­tive to witness another DNA testing by the UP forensics lab. If the NBI conducts its own DNA analysis and corroborat­es the PNP angle, the results could also be suspect because the justice secretary, whose department has supervisio­n over the NBI, is expected to back President Duterte’s “sabotage” angle.

At the same time, there should be more effort to find out who was responsibl­e for the horrific murder of that boy now lying in a coffin in Cainta. The emaciated body is that of a teenager, whose face was found wrapped in a thick layer of tape – a typical treatment of fatalities in the ongoing vicious war on drugs.

Curiously, if the dead is not De Guzman, no one else has come forward to claim the corpse. No one else is looking for a missing teenage boy. The face of the corpse has been shown on TV and is on Facebook. In our extended family system, how come no one except De Guzman’s parents have claimed the body? Did that dead boy just spring from a bamboo stem?

Eduardo, who identified a surgical mark and warts on the corpse at the morgue in Gapan, Nueva Ecija, insisted yesterday that he made no mistake. He’s the father and he knows his son, he said, and the body will be buried today.

Before the interment, PAO officials may want to have forensic personnel obtain DNA samples from the corpse, in the presence of De Guzman’s relatives and PNP representa­tives. A hair strand or nail clippings will do. This is so there will be no need to exhume the corpse as the controvers­y over its identity rages.

Yesterday there was a bit of tug-of-war over the body, which will be interred today as scheduled. Since the corpse had been officially declared as unidentifi­ed, the PNP Criminal Investigat­ion and Detection Group tried to take custody of the body. But the family refused to hand it over and the CIDG members left.

The best remedy is for the PNP to find Reynaldo de Guzman, now officially classified as missing, and to arrest the evil men who tortured and executed that boy found in Gapan.

If that’s not Kulot lying in a coffin, it’s still a dead boy, viciously murdered – another teenager killed in recent weeks amid a ruthless war on drugs.

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