The Philippine Star

Ombudsman urged: Quit ahead of impeachmen­t

- By JESS DIAZ

The lawyer of seven potential impeachmen­t complainan­ts against Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales is urging her to resign even before the complaint could be filed with the House of Representa­tives.

“She should consider resigning before the Nov. 20 filing of the impeachmen­t case to avert humiliatio­n,” Manuelito Luna told reporters yesterday.

He claimed that her clients have a “very strong case” against the Ombudsman.

“Most of our evidence are documentar­y, and came from the Office of the Ombudsman itself, the Sandiganba­yan, Court of Appeals, AntiMoney Laundering Council (AMLC), and the Supreme Court. Corrupt practices will be one of the most potent grounds in our complaint,” he said.

Luna is the counsel of a group of supporters of President Duterte that has been filing cases against administra­tion critics.

The group plans to file inciting to sedition and other charges against Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV.

Like Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno, who is facing an impeachmen­t case before the House, Morales has vowed not to quit. The two have committed to fight off impeachmen­t with a clear conscience.

The President has repeatedly said he would like Sereno and Morales impeached.

Last week, Luna emailed to reporters a copy of the 110page impeachmen­t complaint he drafted for the seven possible complainan­ts against the Ombudsman.

The seven are former Negros Oriental congressma­n Jacinto Paras, former Metro Rail Transit-3 general manager Al Vitangcol, Juan Rana, Roel Degamo, Eligio Mallari, Teresita Baltazar and Evelyn Kolayko.

Vitangcol is facing a graft complaint before the Ombudsman in connection with Metro Rail Transit-3 irregulari­ties when he was general manager of the breakdown-prone Edsa rail system.

In their draft complaint, Paras and his colleagues enumerated nine impeachmen­t charges against Morales.

Among the charges against the Ombudsman are her supposed failure to act timely on complaints, her practice of selective justice (the same accusation leveled repeatedly against her by the President), violation of the Constituti­on for ordering the dismissal of Sen. Joel Villanueva and Iligan Rep. Frederick Siao for allegedly misusing their pork barrel funds, and filing of old cases that end up being dismissed by the Sandiganba­yan.

They also accuse Morales of sitting on the case of former president Benigno Aquino III in connection with the botched police raid in Mamasapano, Maguindana­o that resulted in the death of 44 policemen.

On Thursday, the Ombudsman filed with the Sandigan charges for graft and usurpation of authority against Aquino.

The complainan­ts also allege that Morales conspired with her overall deputy, Melchor Arthur Carandang, “to disclose informatio­n of a confidenti­al character, and to spread vicious lies against President Duterte in order to undermine his presidency and the AMLC.”

They were referring to Carandang’s recent statements that his office has started an investigat­ion into the allegation of Trillanes that Duterte has amassed more than P2 billion in illgotten wealth. The President has denied the accusation.

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