The Philippine Star

Teves deportatio­n sought a er son ‘bribed’ Timorese cop

- By DAPHNE GALVEZ

The Department of Justice (DOJ) is urging Timor-Leste authoritie­s to extradite or deport expelled congressma­n Arnolfo Teves Jr. after his son allegedly bribed a member of the Timor-Leste police.

The DOJ cited reports that TevesÕ son offered a member of the Criminal Investigat­ion Police (PCIC) $2,000 or over P114,000 in exchange for ÒsecurityÓ inside and outside Becora, where the former lawmaker is being detained while waiting for extraditio­n or deportatio­n.

ÒGo home and face the Court squarely,Ó Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla said in a statement yesterday, addressing Teves.

“Let us stop playing hide and seek with the law, one cannot evade accountabi­lity for eternity. Prolonging your liabilitie­s with the rule of law only worsens your predicamen­t,Ó he added.

The DOJ did not disclose the name of TevesÕ son, but the expelled congressma­n is known to have two sons, Kurt and Axl.

The DOJ cited a report from Hatutan. com, an online news outlet in Timor-Leste.

According to the report, a PCIC member asked Teves’ son for $2,000 in exchange for providing maximum security for Teves, who is considered a fugitive.

The article stemmed from a WhatsApp communicat­ion between the PCIC member and TevesÕ son accessed by Hatutan.

Teves, tagged as the mastermind behind the assassinat­ion of Negros Oriental governor Roel Degamo in March 2023, is currently in pre-trial detention at Becora Prison after he was arrested last March 21 while playing golf in Dili.

His arrest was based on the Internatio­nal Criminal Police Organizati­on (Interpol)ÕÕ red notice issued against him in February, which is a request to law enforcemen­t worldwide to locate and arrest a person pending extraditio­n, surrender or similar legal action.

Teves has been designated a terrorist along with 11 others by the Anti-Terrorism Council due to alleged killings and harassment in Negros Oriental.

After being linked to the Degamo assassinat­ion, Teves went into hiding, prompting the House of Representa­tives to vote for his expulsion in August last year.

The government subsequent­ly canceled his passport, while Interpol issued an internatio­nal red notice for TevesÕ provisiona­l detention pending turnover to the state seeking his arrest.

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