The Philippine Star

Jinggoy eyed as DAP witness

- By EDU PUNAY

Now that he is out on bail, will former senator Jinggoy Estrada spill the beans on an alleged anomaly in the multibilli­on-peso Disburseme­nt Accelerati­on Program (DAP) of the previous administra­tion?

Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II hinted at this possibilit­y after Estrada was granted bail by the Sandiganba­yan in his plunder case involving the Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund (PDAF) scam and released last Saturday after three years in detention.

“(Former) senator Jinggoy can be used as a witness in the investigat­ion and possible cases on the DAP anomaly,” Aguirre told The STAR yesterday.

The Department of Justice (DOJ) chief cited Estrada’s earlier statement that he received P50 million in DAP funds during the administra­tion of former president Benigno Aquino III supposedly for the ouster of the late chief justice

Renato Corona during impeachmen­t trial in 2012.

He explained that Estrada’s testimony could be necessary to prove the alleged anomaly and misuse of DAP funds.

Aguirre noted that Estrada, as a beneficiar­y or proponent of DAP, cannot be held liable per ruling of the Supreme Court which only pointed the possible culpabilit­y to “authors” of the program.

Estrada reportedly bared that when Corona was ousted after impeachmen­t trial in 2012, he and other senators who voted for the guilty verdict were each given P50 million in DAP funds.

Aguirre also confirmed that his office has received official documents and records involving the P144-billion DAP funds, which were meant to boost government spending during the term of Aquino.

The DOJ would conduct a fact-finding investigat­ion to determine the anomalies in the DAP and who could be held criminally liable.

Among the documents is a 2014 report of the Commission on Audit (COA) showing that at least 46 lawmakers received DAP funds worth P229.6 million for a milk feeding program just days after Corona was impeached by the House of Representa­tives in December 2011.

The COA report showed that the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) issued special allotment release orders and notice of cash allocation­s for members of the House of Representa­tives on Dec. 22, 2011, or 10 days after the House of Representa­tives impeached Corona.

The DAP allocation was supposed to fund a milk feeding program that did not actually accelerate government spending, contrary to the purpose of the program.

The COA held that the project “may not have fully contribute­d in the attainment of the DAP objective of accelerati­ng government spending” because “from the time the funds of P167.44 million or 72.9 percent were released in September 2012, only 87 percent or P145.694 million was obligated, and out of which, a total of P87.002 million or 59.7 percent was disbursed for 33 projects.”

The report has recommende­d that the unutilized funds be returned to the Bureau of Treasury after the SC struck down the DAP for being unconstitu­tional in a ruling in July 2014.

Earlier this month, a coalition of anti-pork barrel groups called on the DOJ to investigat­e the alleged anomalies in use of DAP funds.

The group led by former Manila councilor Greco Belgica also submitted to the DOJ the records of the DBM on the DAP expenditur­es during the previous administra­tion.

Belgica asked the DOJ to conduct a fact-finding investigat­ion on the submitted records, which showed a discrepanc­y of P2.6 billion from the DAP spending, and pursue cases of malversati­on of public funds with aggravatin­g circumstan­ces against Aquino, former DBM secretary Florencio Abad and former DBM undersecre­tary Mario Relampagos.

The documents also showed that P6.5 billion from the P144billio­n DAP funds of the previous administra­tion was allocated to various local projects that were not itemized in the budget.

The former councilor also claimed that the anomalies include ghost projects funded by DAP, citing projects involving lampposts and bridges that were given DAP funds but were found to be not actually built upon verificati­on.

Jinggoy to move for junking plunder

As to the plunder and graft charges filed against him, Estrada will move for the dismissal of the cases as soon as the prosecutor­s of the Office of the Ombudsman finish their presentati­on of alleged evidence against him.

Like in the plunder case of former president Gloria Macapacal-Arroyo involving the alleged misuse of Philippine Charity Sweepstake­s Office (PCSO) funds, Estrada will have his lawyers file a demurrer to evidence, which will challenge the evidence that Ombudsman prosecutor­s have.

Such pleading is filed by an accused in a criminal case when the accused thinks that the prosecutio­n’s case is weak that the accused does not even have to present defense evidence to have the charges dismissed.

Arroyo, now a congresswo­man of Pampanga, used the same strategy, which led to the dismissal of the PCSO plunder case against her in July 2016.

The Sandiganba­yan initially junked Arroyo’s demurrer to evidence but the Supreme Court reversed the decision of the anti-graft court, which cleared and freed the former president on grounds of insufficie­ncy of evidence.

Estrada was released from detention on Saturday after the Sandiganba­yan granted his petition for bail. He said he will attend the first day of the trial today and will try his best to attend all future trial dates.

Estrada was among three senators who were first to be indicted for alleged involvemen­t in the misuse of PDAF in connivance with alleged scam mastermind, businesswo­man Janet Lim Napoles.

Estrada and former senators Juan Ponce Enrile and Ramon Revilla Jr. were charged for allegedly receiving kickbacks or commission­s from bogus nongovernm­ent organizati­ons that implemente­d ghost projects using their PDAF.

The Supreme Court has earlier released Enrile on bail for humanitari­an reasons, while Revilla is still detained at the Philippine National Police custodial center in Camp Crame.

Estrada yesterday visited Revilla and brought him food. The PNP said Estrada arrived at 2 p.m. and left at 3:35 p.m.

Visitors need to pass through three metal gates to reach the complex of the senators’ detention cell, which reportedly resembles a condominiu­m unit with multipurpo­se area.

But as to the bed, Estrada said: “ang tigas ng higaan ko doon sa Crame (my bed in Crame was uncomforta­ble).

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