The Philippine Star

Veloso allowed to testify vs recruiters

- By ROBERTZON RAMIREZ

The Supreme Court (SC) has allowed convicted drug mule Mary Jane Veloso to testify against her recruiters through deposition from Indonesia where she has been behind bars since her arrest in 2010.

In its decision, the SC also junked a Court of Appeals (CA) ruling that barred her from doing the same in December 2017.

In a statement released yesterday, the SC Third Division granted on Wednesday the petition for review of certiorari filed by Veloso’s camp against the CA’s ruling.

Justice Ramon Paul Hernando was the ponente of the ruling.

The CA had reversed a resolution of the Sto. Domingo, Nueva Ecija Regional Trial Court (RTC) Branch 88 on Dec. 13, 2017 that granted the prosecutio­n’s motion on Aug. 16, 2016, allowing Veloso to testify against her recruiters from Indonesian prison.

“Thus, the [SC] reinstated and affirmed with modificati­on the ruling of the RTC and ordered that the deposition of Mary Jane be taken before the Philippine Consular Office and officials in Indonesia pursuant to the Rules of Court and principles of jurisdicti­on,” the SC said in a statement.

“To disallow the written interrogat­ories will curtail (Veloso’s) right to due process,” it said.

The SC also noted that the RTC did not gravely abuse its discretion when it allowed Veloso to testify, given her condition in Indonesia.

Veloso’s recruiters and former hometown neighbors, Maria Cristina Sergio and Julius Lacanilao, reportedly offered her a job as a domestic helper supposedly in Malaysia. She, however, ended up in Indonesia.

Sergio and Lacanilao are facing charges of human traffickin­g, illegal recruitmen­t and estafa.

“In overturnin­g the RTC’s decision, the CA held that contrary to the RTC’s findings, the conditiona­l examinatio­n of witnesses in criminal proceeding­s are primarily governed by Rule 119 of the Rules on Criminal Procedure,” the SC said.

But the SC also acknowledg­ed the CA’s ruling when it asserted that Section 15, Rule 119 of the Rules of Court – which provides the examinatio­n of witnesses for prosecutio­n – was inapplicab­le in Veloso’s case.

It also emphasized that the CA’s denial of Veloso’s motion for deposition “appeared to have strictly and rigidly applied and interprete­d” the rules of court “without taking into considerat­ion the concomitan­t right of due process” of Veloso and the prosecutio­n.

Taking note of Veloso’s imprisonme­nt in Indonesia, the SC said she could not be examined for prosecutio­n, as “she cannot even take a single step out of the prison facility of her own volition without facing severe consequenc­es.”

“Her imprisonme­nt in Indonesia and the conditions attached to her reprieve denied her of any opportunit­y to decide for herself to voluntaril­y appear and testify before the trial court in Nueva Ecija where the cases of the respondent­s of illegal recruitmen­t were pending,” the SC said.

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