The Philippine Star

CamSur town mayor suspended for graft

- By ELIZABETH MARCELO

The Sandiganba­yan has suspended for 90 days a town mayor in Camarines Sur and five municipal officials in Bohol for graft.

In a six-page resolution promulgate­d on Oct. 19 and released yesterday, the antigraft court’s seventh division affirmed its earlier ruling suspending Tomas Bongalonta of Pili, Camarines Sur over the alleged illegal dismissal of a municipal employee in 2005.

The Sandiganba­yan dismissed Bongalonta’s argument that “it is too late” to order his suspension because the trial of the case is ongoing. The court said Section 13 of the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act mandates the suspension of a public official facing charges regardless of the stage of the proceeding­s.

The Sandiganba­yan rejected Bongalonta’s argument that he could only be suspended for 30 days after serving a suspension order of the Office of the Ombudsman for 60 days for an administra­tive case over the same complaint.

“Criminal cases are… different from administra­tive matters... and may proceed independen­tly of criminal proceeding­s,” the court said.

The Sandiganba­yan also denied Bongalonta’s petition to dismiss the case over the supposed inordinate delay in the investigat­ion by the ombudsman.

The case stemmed from the dismissal of Eileen Ceron despite an ombudsman ruling that merely suspended her over a minor offense.

“The penalty of dismissal… had no legal basis… It deprived Ceron not only of her office but also salaries and… benefits amounting to P955,285.06,” the complaint read.

Bohol town execs

In another resolution dated Sept. 19 and released also yesterday, the fifth division of the Sandiganba­yan suspended Panglao municipal budget officer Catalino Sumaylo, engineer Rogelio Bonao, treasurer Rena Guivencan, administra­tive assistant Dionisia Estopito and administra­tive aide Rene Lustre.

The municipal govern- ment officials were charged with graft over the alleged anomalous procuremen­t of a Kia Sorento worth P1.46 million in 2008 through direct contractin­g instead of public bidding. They were included in the charge sheet filed against former Panglao mayor Benedicto Alcala.

The court said the suspension of incumbent public officials charged under a valid complaint for any offense involving fraud upon government or public funds or property is mandatory.

The suspension is necessary to prevent the accused from hampering his or her prosecutio­n by intimidati­ng or influencin­g witnesses, tampering with evidence or committing further acts of malfeasanc­e, the Sandiganba­yan said.

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