The Philippine Star

No successor yet for outgoing PNP chief

With less than a month before Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Gen. Rodolfo Azurin Jr. bows out of the service, there is no word yet on his possible successor.

- By EMMANUEL TUPAS

The first chief of the 27,000-strong PNP under President Marcos’ administra­tion, the soft-spoken Azurin is set to retire on April 24.

Marcos can choose from any of the star-rank officers in the PNP as the next leader of the country’s police force.

At least six names have cropped up as Azurin’s possible successor. Among them are PNP deputy chief for administra­tion Lt. Gen. Rhodel Sermonia and Lt. Gen. Michael John Dubria, chief of the directoria­l staff.

The other possible contenders are Maj. Gen. Eliseo Cruz, director of the Directorat­e for Investigat­ion and Detective Management (DIDM); PNP deputy chief for operations Maj. Gen. Jonnel Estomo; National Capital Region Police Office (NCRPO) head Maj. Gen. Edgar Alan Okubo and Criminal Investigat­ion and Detection Group (CIDG) director Brig. Gen. Romeo Caramat Jr.

Cruz is the most senior among the six as he will retire on June 14.

Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla recently lauded Cruz for the innovation­s he introduced in the PNP, specifical­ly the digital booking system or e-booking, which modernizes the booking process of persons arrested for crimes.

With the new system, the collection and cross-matching of fingerprin­ts through the Automated Fingerprin­t identifica­tion System would be faster and more efficient.

Before he became DIDM head, Cruz was the director of the CIDG and has supervised the probe on the kidnapping and disappeara­nce of 34 cockfight players or sabungeros.

He also headed the Calabarzon police, Highway Patrol Group, Northern Police District and Southern Police District.

Sermonia was initially reassigned by Azurin as director of the Area Police Command in the Visayas but was brought back as the No. 2 man in the PNP.

He has managed the affairs of the PNP every time Azurin has official trips abroad.

Sermonia, who will retire on Jan. 6, 2024, also headed the Directorat­e for Police Community Relations and Central Luzon police.

Dubria served as director of the Civil Security Group and had stints as head of the Directorat­e for Intelligen­ce and Police Regional Office 12. He will retire on Dec. 20, 2024.

Prior to his latest post as the No. 3 man in the PNP, Estomo was known as the director of the NCRPO.

Among Estomo’s notable achievemen­ts was solving the murder of broadcaste­r Percy Lapid in Las Piñas wherein former Bureau of Correction­s chief Gerald Bantag was tagged as the mastermind.

Estomo used to head the Bicol police and also served as director of the Anti-Kidnapping Group. He will retire on Nov. 25, 2024.

Caramat, on the other hand, is currently supervisin­g the probe of the murder of Negros Oriental governor Roel Degamo and eight other people as CIDG director.

He had stints as head of the Caraga police and the PNP Drug Enforcemen­t Group.

He also led the crackdown of scalawags in uniform as director of the Integrity Monitoring and Enforcemen­t Group. He will retire on Oct. 2, 2024.

The youngest of the six is Okubo, who will retire on May 21, 2026. Before his current post as NCRPO chief, he served as director of the elite Special Action Force.

The two-star general from Benguet earlier declared he will assign policewome­n as desk officers in police stations in Metro to further boost relations with the community.

Should he be chosen, Okubo will be the first graduate of the Philippine National Police Academy to lead the PNP.

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Sermonia
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Caramat
 ?? ?? Estomo
Estomo
 ?? ?? Dubria
Dubria
 ?? ?? Okubo
Okubo
 ?? ?? Cruz
Cruz

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