The Philippine Star

‘Returning P60 M won’t extinguish criminal liability’

- By DELON PORCALLA – With Elizabeth Marcelo

Returning the P60 million to government coffers will not extinguish the administra­tive and criminal liability of Tourism Secretary Wanda Teo, who allocated the funds for the Department of Tourism (DOT)’s advertisin­g contract with her brothers in stateowned PTV-4.

“Returning the money is an admission of guilt. It will not efface the accountabi­lity of Secretary Teo for the improper transactio­n. She should still resign,” Rep. Antonio Tinio of party-list ACT Teachers insisted.

Besides, Tinio pointed out that Teo – being a government official– does not represent Bitag Media Unlimited Inc., a company that her brother Bienvenido Tulfo owns.

“First of all, does Teo speak for the Bitag Media outfit that received the money from the (DOT)?” Tinio asked.

Another opposition lawmaker, Rep. Tom Villarin of party-list Akbayan, agreed.

“The best option still is for Secretary Teo to resign so she won’t force the hand of President Duterte to axe her,” Villarin said.

“The deed is done, the doers undone – that sums up what the return of the P60 million by the Tulfo brothers of Bitag Media to their sister, DOT Secretary Wanda TulfoTeo,” he said in a Viber message to reporters.

“As an allusion to the Shakespear­ean play ‘Macbeth,’ the mental torment of their despicable act and President Duterte’s warning of a ‘whiff of corruption and you’re out’ forced them to such decision,” Villarin added.

“It’s an afterthoug­ht when all things weigh against them, not because their hands are clean. But again it doesn’t exculpate them from such wrongful acts and the Malacañang investigat­ion of the DOT-PTV-4/Bitag Media deal should lead to a conclusive ending,” he said.

The Commission on Audit (COA) and the Office of the Ombudsman remain mum about the ad placements.

COA chairman Michael Aguinaldo has yet to respond to reporters’ queries.

The COA has the power to recommend administra­tive or criminal investigat­ion against concerned officials of a government agency, whose transactio­ns were found to be irregular by the audit body.

Meanwhile, under the ombudsman’s internal rules, it can launch a motu proprio (self-initiated) criminal or administra­tive investigat­ion on any alleged anomaly in the government, despite lack of a formal complaint from any party.

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