The Philippine Star

Rody kin cleared, Faeldon faces raps for BOC shabu

- By ELIZABETH MARCELO

President Duterte looks at the watch of former justice secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II during the distributi­on of land titles to farmers in Mulanay, Quezon yesterday. Aguirre, a law school classmate and fraternity brother of the President, is a native of Mulanay town. KRIZJOHN ROSALES

A fact-finding panel of the Office of the Ombudsman has cleared “for lack of basis” President Duterte’s son Paolo and son-in-law Manases Carpio of involvemen­t in the smuggling of P6.4 billion worth of shabu in May 2017, but recommende­d the filing of criminal and administra­tive charges against former Customs chief Nicanor Faeldon.

In a statement, the ombudsman said its field investigat­ors have finished the fact-finding stage of the probe. Those recommende­d for criminal indictment would have to undergo preliminar­y investigat­ion by the ombudsman

central office.

Sought for comment, Faeldon called the panel’s recommenda­tion “completely ridiculous.” He is now deputy administra­tor of the Office of Civil Defense (OCD).

Malacañang said it respects the recommenda­tion of the panel as such will enable Faeldon and the others to “have their day in court where they can defend themselves in the upcoming preliminar­y investigat­ion in connection with the incident.”

Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales had inhibited from the proceeding­s, citing her affinity with Manases and the Dutertes. Manases, her nephew, is married to presidenti­al daughter and Davao City Mayor Sara DuterteCar­pio.

It was in November last year when Morales ordered a motu propio (own-initiative) investigat­ion on the shabu shipment anomaly following the President’s pronouncem­ent that an independen­t agency must look into the matter.

The ombudsman said the fact-finding panel specifical­ly recommende­d that a complaint of violation of Republic Act 3019 or the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act be filed against Faeldon, then Bureau of Customs director Neil Anthony Estrella, BOC-Import Assessment Service (IAS) director Milo Maestrecam­po, Risk Management Office (RMO) chief Larribert Hilario and Accounts Management Office (AMO) chief Mary Grace Tecson-Malabed.

The fact-finding team also recommende­d that additional complaints of usurpation of official functions under the Revised Penal Code and violation of the Comprehens­ive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002 be filed against Faeldon.

The ombudsman panel also found sufficient ground to charge Faeldon, Malabed, Maestrecam­po, as well as two other BOC officials Joel Pinawin and Oliver Valiente, with administra­tive offense of grave misconduct.

An administra­tive complaint of gross neglect of duty has also been recommende­d for Malabed and Maestrecam­po.

“The criminal and administra­tive charges will undergo preliminar­y investigat­ion and administra­tive adjudicati­on, respective­ly,” the ombudsman’s statement read.

On May 26 last year, joint operatives from the BOC, National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI) and Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA) seized 602.2 kilograms of shabu worth P6.4 billion during a raid on a warehouse in Valenzuela City owned by the Philippine Hongfei Logistics Group of Companies Inc. The illegal drugs were found hidden inside printing cylinders.

The shabu shipment supposedly arrived on May 17 from Xiamen, China and released from the Port of Manila on May 23.

“The BOC later discovered and seized the shabu but the manner through which the discovery and seizure were made leaves much to be desired,” the panel’s resolution read.

“Evidence suggests that numerous laws and administra­tive issuances pertaining to the proper search, seizure, handling and controlled delivery of drugs were violated by the public officers,” it added.

At a Senate hearing on the issue late last year, customs broker Mark Taguba revealed that sometime in January 2017, he handed over P5 million in cash to a certain “Small,” who claimed to be the representa­tive of the younger Duterte in the task of helping Taguba facilitate the release of his shipment.

Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV earlier identified “Small” as Davao City Councilor Nilo Abellera, who was reportedly close to Duterte.

Trillanes said Paolo led the so-called “Davao group” which called the shots in the smuggling activities at the BOC. The opposition senator also accused Carpio of being part of the Davao group.

Taguba, in a statement released after his testimony at the Senate, clarified that he never knew Duterte and Carpio personally and that he had never implicated the two in the P6.4-billion shabu shipment from China.

Duterte resigned as Davao City vice mayor at the height of the controvers­y but filed a civil suit against Trillanes before the Davao City regional trial court.

Instead of having him charged, Faeldon said he should even be honored and rewarded for his quick action that resulted in the seizure of the smuggled illegal drugs just three and half hours after he learned about it.

“Graft? I should be honored because I was able to catch (the shipment) despite its having been shipped out of our port,” he told reporters at Camp Aguinaldo. “Where is justice here?” the former Marine captain said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines