The Philippine Star

Palace to Sereno: Resign

- By EDU PUNAY

Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno should resign and save the Supreme Court from “further damage,” Malacañang said yesterday.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque issued the call as the House committee on justice prepares to meet on Nov. 20 to determine if there is probable cause to pursue impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Sereno.

In a press briefing, Roque said the judiciary might not survive another removal of a chief justice through impeachmen­t. He was referring to the 2012 ouster through impeachmen­t of Sereno’s predecesso­r Renato Corona during the Aquino administra­tion. Corona was impeached for not declaring all his wealth in his statements of assets, liabilitie­s and net worth (SALN).

Asked whether President Duterte shared his view on Sereno, Roque said, “Of course, the President wants her removed altogether, by all means.”

Last month, the House of Representa­tives voted to impeach Andres Bautista, but he stepped down as chairman of the Commission on Elections before the chamber could forward his case to the Senate for trial.

From Page 1 During the Aquino administra­tion, the House also impeached Merceditas Gutierrez. She resigned as ombudsman instead of facing the Senate impeachmen­t court.

“I think it is high time now for the Chief Justice to reexamine very carefully the effect of another removal to the institutio­n itself. It cannot be that there will be a second instance that a sitting Chief Justice will be removed as a result of a decision of the Senate,” Roque said yesterday.

“We cannot wait for that. If we were to wait for that, it is the finding of guilt that will undermine the independen­ce of the judiciary. So I call upon Chief Justice Sereno to really consider resigning if only to spare the institutio­n from any further damage,” he added.

“It will be very difficult for the judiciary to recover from a second Senate decision to remove a sitting Chief Justice because of a finding that that Chief Justice is guilty of an impeachabl­e offense. I don’t think the Court can afford that so soon after the removal of former chief justice Corona,” Roque said.

The impeachmen­t complaint against Sereno, filed by lawyer Lorenzo Gadon, stemmed from her alleged failure to declare P37 million in profession­al fees as private lawyer representi­ng the government in the case against Philippine Internatio­nal Air Terminals Co. Inc (Piatco), builder of the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport Terminal 3.

She was also accused of ordering the P5-million purchase of a Land Cruiser for her personal use, using public funds to stay in opulent hotels, ordering Muntinlupa judges not to issue arrest warrants against Sen. Leila de Lima and delaying action on the petitions for the retirement benefits of justices, judges and surviving spouses, among other allegation­s.

Her lawyers have denied the allegation­s.

Last month, Duterte expressed support for the impeachmen­t of Sereno whom he accused of allowing herself to be used by groups that want him ousted.

Roque said his statements against Sereno were not intended to erode the independen­ce of the judiciary.

“I’m commenting about an impeachmen­t proceeding and it has nothing to do with the judiciary. It’s about the personal liability of an impeachabl­e officer and the issue there is whether she committed impeachabl­e offenses. So, I’m not underminin­g the judiciary,” he said.

No effect on independen­ce

Roque argued an impeachmen­t proceeding would not affect the independen­ce of the judiciary as it is a constituti­onal procedure.

He said Sereno has herself to blame if she thinks the independen­ce of the judiciary has been eroded.

“If at all, perhaps what will undermine the independen­ce of the judiciary would be acts committed by judicial agents that would lead to the initiation of impeachmen­t proceeding­s,” the presidenti­al spokesman said.

“She has only to blame herself if she feels that the impeachmen­t proceeding­s have affected the independen­ce of the judiciary,” he added.

Roque, a former member of the House justice committee, said the accusation­s against Sereno are backed by “convincing” evidence.

“I’ve seen the evidence because I was a member of the House committee on justice, I read the complaint, I read her answer, I read all the reply and I’m very bothered by the allegation­s which to my mind are supported not just by substantia­l evidence but very convincing evidence that some of the grounds may in fact be impeachabl­e,” he said.

Roque clarified that he was not preempting the decision of the Senate on the impeachmen­t complaint against Sereno.

“We should not even speculate on how the Senate will decide. I’m saying that the best way to protect the institutio­n is to forgo with the trial altogether and save the institutio­n from further damage,” he said.

For Rep. Gus Tambunting of Parañaque, resignatio­n “is the sole prerogativ­e of the person subject of the impeachmen­t.”

Tambunting, chairman of the House games and amusement committee, said he’d rather let the constituti­onal process take its course on Sereno’s case.

“My position in these kinds of matters will always be to let the procedures provided by the Constituti­on go forward, respecting all the time our institutio­ns,” the senior administra­tion lawmaker added.

Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez earlier said the House committee on justice has rock solid evidence against the Supreme Court chief, citing “authentic” SC documents and the potential testimony of six incumbent justices.

There were also reports two SC psychiatri­sts have expressed willingnes­s to testify against Sereno. The two were career employees in the judiciary but were dismissed after they reportedly released their findings that she had flunked a psychiatri­c examinatio­n.

The confidenti­al report is with the Judicial and Bar Council which Sereno – as SC chief – heads, and whose ex-officio members include Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II, a senator and a congressma­n, among others.

He said the complaint against Sereno was even more serious than the one filed against former elections chief Andres Bautista, which was based on allegation­s raised by his estranged wife Patricia. The PDP-Laban stalwart promised to accord Sereno due process.

The Speaker emphasized the House committee on justice of Oriental Mindoro Rep. Reynaldo Umali would scrutinize all the evidence submitted by Gadon.

Umali said his panel is set to conduct hearing on Sereno’s impeachmen­t on Nov. 20 upon the resumption of legislativ­e session and after the Philippine­s’ hosting of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations Summit and Related Meetings. The hearing was originally scheduled for Nov. 13.

The panel will seek to determine probable cause to impeach Sereno. If probable cause is determined, the panel will draft Articles of Impeachmen­t for submission to the Senate which will function as an impeachmen­t court.

Sereno, who was appointed by former president Benigno Aquino III to head the SC when she was 52, will be chief justice for 18 years, or until 2030, when she reaches the mandatory retirement age of 70 for magistrate­s.

If she completes her term, she will have the distinctio­n of serving four administra­tions – Aquino, President Duterte and the succeeding administra­tions in 2022 and 2028.

Sereno was the youngest SC justice in the 15-member SC when Aquino promoted her in 2012.

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