The Philippine Star

House sees Sereno impeachmen­t by March

- By DELON PORCALLA

The House of Representa­tives may elevate the impeachmen­t complaint lawyer Lorenzo Gadon filed against Chief Justice Ma. Lourdes Sereno to the Senate by the last week of March, Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez disclosed.

“Before we go on break (for the Holy Week), we might be able to file it because we have already started (drafting) the articles of impeachmen­t,” Alvarez said in Filipino during a press conference in Iloilo City last week.

He advised Sereno not to be impatient or get frustrated as she will definitely be given her day in her preferred venue – the Senate impeachmen­t court.

“I think she wants it rushed to the Senate where she thinks she has the numbers. But for

me, let us do this properly… people are watching us (on TV). Her accusers are presenting their evidence and her colleagues have spoken. This is the first time in the history of the Supreme Court,” Alvarez said.

Her psychiatri­st, he added, would also appear before the committee to shed light on whether or not Sereno met the minimum requiremen­ts to become chief justice.

Oriental Mindoro Rep. Reynaldo Umali, chairman of the House committee on justice, earlier said the impeachmen­t complaint is just a matter of formality following the strong belief of Alvarez that the issues raised against Sereno stand on strong and solid ground.

In last week’s hearing, at least two SC officials said Sereno’s acquisitio­n of a P5.1-million Toyota Land Cruiser might have violated the Government Procuremen­t Reform Act.

“It was already pre-determined, your honor,” Ma. Carina Cunanan, procuremen­t head and assistant chief of SC’s administra­tive services, told the committee.

When questioned, she conceded it was a “directive” from the Chief Justice’s camp but downplayed the infraction.

“We had to ask the office of the end user what vehicle they would prefer in the event we procure a vehicle. So it was them who said Land Cruiser,” Cunanan recalled.

House Majority Leader Rodolfo Fariñas pointed out that, under existing procuremen­t laws, preferring a brand in biddings is strictly prohibited and that only specificat­ions should be stated in the notices to be fair to other equally reliable brands.

Although there was already an endorsemen­t to get a Land Cruiser, lawyer Thelma Bahia, head of the SC bids and awards committee, said they did not specify the brand and just stated the specificat­ions when the procuremen­t of vehicle notice was posted.

“That’s how you skirt the law,” Fariñas said as Bahia confirmed that only supplier Toyota Makati showed up during the bidding.

ABS party-list Rep. Eugene de Vera said that the P6-million budget the SC prepared for the purchase of vehicles was specifical­ly meant for the purchase of a Toyota Land Cruiser. Apart from the Land Cruiser, Sereno is using another vehicle, a 2011 Hyundai Starex Gold.

‘Personal opinions’

Lawyer Jojo Lacanilao, one of Sereno’s spokespers­ons, downplayed the testimonie­s of six high court justices, saying these were not enough to impeach the chief magistrate because they are “based on purely personal opinions.”

“Most of the things they have said are disagreeme­nts with the Chief Justice on how the rules of the Supreme Court would be interprete­d. Some of them are complaints about management or maybe leadership style,” Lacanilao pointed out.

The SC justices who testified before the House committee on justice were Teresita Leonardo-de Castro, Francis Jardeleza, Noel Tijam, Diosdado Peralta, Lucas Bersamin and Samuel Martirez.

Lacanilao claimed that some incumbent justices had an axe to grind because Sereno “leapfrogge­d over other senior associate justices” and would serve as the high court’s chief for 18 years or until she reaches 70, the mandatory age of retirement.

He was disappoint­ed that the justices were allowing themselves to be part of a process that is threatenin­g the independen­ce of the judiciary as a co-equal branch of government.

“We feel like this is a problem with the independen­ce of the Supreme Court now because they (justices) have gone to Congress and laid themselves out,” Lacanilao said in a statement.

“In fact, many of them appeared in public and did not appear well. The mystique, mystery of being a Supreme Court justice is gone because some of these justices have already come out and shown they are also weak and have personal grudges they cannot overcome. They have personal issues against the Chief Justice,” he added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines