The Philippine Star

DOJ to issue lookout bulletin vs Faeldon

- By EDU PUNAY With Paolo Romero, Sheila Crisostomo

The Department of Justice (DOJ) is set to take action to prevent the flight of former commission­er Nicanor Faeldon and other former officials of the Bureau of Customs (BOC) implicated in the alleged smuggling of P6.4 billion worth of shabu in a shipment seized last May.

Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II said he will issue a lookout bulletin order (LBO) to make sure Faeldon and the other respondent­s do not evade criminal proceeding­s.

This developed as the respondent­s in the complaint filed by Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA) vowed to face criminal proceeding­s and not to go into hiding.

“Since the preliminar­y investigat­ion is already ongoing, we will issue the LBO if the cases would be filed in court,” the DOJ chief said yesterday.

An LBO will not automatica­lly prevent the subjects from leaving the country unlike a hold departure order (HDO) issued by trial courts, but it will require them to ask permission first from the DOJ before they could be allowed to leave.

Aguirre said he would wait for the conclusion of the preliminar­y investigat­ion (PI) by the investigat­ing panel of prosecutor­s, believing the respondent­s presently have no reason to go into hiding.

“Since they are participat­ing in the PI, we can take that as a guarantee that they will not evade the criminal proceeding­s. If they say they are confident that they will be absolved, then there’s no need to hide,” he stressed.

Should the DOJ find probable cause in the string of charges filed against the former BOC officials and file the case in court, Aguirre said prosecutor­s could then ask for issuance of the HDO.

Aguirre issued the statement after one of the respondent­s, former Customs Investigat­ion and Intelligen­ce Service (CIIS) chief Neil Anthony Estrella, publicly said in a recent forum that they would not allow themselves to be jailed over the baseless charges and would rather go into hiding.

The other respondent­s in the charge sheet are former import assessment services director Milo Maestrecam­po; intelligen­ce officers Joel Pinawin and Oliver Valiente; Manila Internatio­nal Container Port district collector lawyer Vincent Phillip Maronilla; Faeldon’s fiancé, lawyer Jeline Maree Magsuci; and BOC employees Alexandra Ventura, Randolph Cabansag, Dennis Maniego, Dennis Cabildo and John Edillor.

They are expected to answer the charges at the next hearing set for Oct. 19.

In a 23-page complaint filed last Sept.18, the PDEA sought the indictment of Faeldon, Estrella and 10 other Customs officers for conspiracy to import illegal drugs and protecting or coddling of drug trafficker­s under Republic Act 9165 (Comprehens­ive Dangerous Drugs Act).

The PDEA also accused Faeldon and other BOC officers of obstructio­n of justice under Presidenti­al Decree No. 1829 by “harboring or concealing, or facilitati­ng the escape” of the persons behind the shabu shipment.

Faeldon and other respondent­s were also accused of negligence and tolerance under Article 208 of the Revised Penal Code.

Lastly, the PDEA also filed charges of corrupt practices of public officers under Section 3 of RA 3019 (Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act) for allegedly “causing any undue injury to any party, including the government, or giving any private party any unwarrante­d benefits, advantage or preference in the discharge of his official administra­tive or judicial functions through manifest partiality, evident bad faith or gross inexcusabl­e negligence.”

Senate recommenda­tion

The Senate Blue Ribbon committee had also recommende­d the filing of criminal and administra­tive charges against former BOC officials in connection with rampant corruption and smuggling activities in the bureau.

In the 52-page draft committee report being circulated among senators for signature, the panel recommende­d the filing of charges for violation of the Customs Modernizat­ion and Tariff Act (CMTA), and the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act against former BOC chief Faeldon, Maestrecam­po, Estrella, Pinawin and Gerardo Gambala.

The panel, chaired by Sen. Richard Gordon, held nine hearings into the reported corruption in the BOC and the smuggling of more than a ton of methamphet­amine hydrochlor­ide from China that slipped through the bureau’s express or “green lane” in the past several months.

“What happened here is so grave and shocking to the senses because the BOC has failed to guard our portals from the entry of drugs that kill us and our countrymen. Our sentinels have failed us,” the report read.

“We have entered into a new phase in our struggle – huge amounts of drugs are entering the country through the BOC, corrupting public officers, enriching only the players in it, while contributi­ng to the country’s moral decay,” it stated. –

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