Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

Palace denies role in junked forfeiture suit vs. Marcoses

- BY RUTH ABBEY GITACARLOS

MANILA — Malacañang clarified on Tuesday that the executive branch has no hand in the Sandiganba­yan Fourth Division’s move to junk the Php200-billion civil forfeiture case against the family of the late president Ferdinand Marcos.

This came after the anti-graft court dismissed the forfeiture case against Marcos, his wife Imelda, their children Imelda Josefa, Irene, and Ferdinand Jr.; and the family’s “confidante” Constante Rubio due to the Philippine Commission on Good Governance’s (PCGG) failure to “prove its allegation­s by prepondera­nce of evidence.”

Presidenti­al Spokespers­on and Chief Presidenti­al Legal Counsel Salvador Panelo said the Sandiganba­yan’s decision was based on the pieces of evidence presented by concerned parties to the court.

“As we have repeatedly said, we never interfere with the decision of the court. The court will always decide on the basis of evidence,” Panelo said in an interview with Palace reporters.

“Well, we always consider that all courts will observe due process because that is precisely what the Constituti­on tells everyone, lawyers and courts,” he added.

In a 58-page decision released on Monday, the Sandiganba­yan ruled against the PCGG because only 24 of 188 pieces of documentar­y evidence submitted were original copies while the remaining documents were either certified true copy of the original, certified true copy, or photocopy.

The court said the PCGG clearly violates the best evidence rule.

“The fact that these documents were collected by the PCGG in the course of its investigat­ions does not make them per se public records,” the antigraft court said.

The decision was based on the complaint filed on July 16, 1987 against the Marcoses for allegedly amassing an ill-gotten wealth.

The case seeks to recover the Php200-billion of the Marcos family purportedl­y obtained “during their incumbency as public officers” and were not establishe­d as “having been lawfully acquired.”

The assets include approximat­ely PHP976 million at the Security Bank and Trust Company, approximat­ely PHP711 million at the defunct Traders Royal Bank, 33 parcels of residentia­l property, and about 21,700 hectares of agricultur­al land in Leyte.

The Marcoses were also accused of owning shares of stock in numerous corporatio­ns totaling around 625 million shares, including 2.4 million shares at PLDT valued at approximat­ely PHP1.6 billion covered by shares of stocks in the Philippine Telecommun­ication Investment Corp. held by the PHI, Ramon Cojuangco and the latter’s associates.

Asked if the Palace was not bothered by the court’s decision, Panelo said: “Any government is concerned with any case filed by it against perceived transgress­ors of the law. But the final analysis is it’s the court that always decides whether you have a case against the accused.”

Panelo, however, acknowledg­ed that the complaint was dismissed due to the PCGG’S failure to present original documents that will back its claim about the Marcoses’ supposed hidden wealth.

He said it would now be up to Solicitor General Jose Calida to take appropriat­e actions with regard to the Sandiganba­yan’s ruling.

“That’s for the Solgen to decide. We will not preempt,” Panelo said.

This is the fourth time the PCGG lost its case filed before the Sandiganba­yan due to insufficie­ncy of evidence.

On Oct. 23, the Sandiganba­yan Fourth Division junked the Php267.371-million civil forfeiture case against the Marcos family and spouses Ignacio and Fe Jimenez.

Meanwhile, the Sandiganba­yan Second Division dismissed the Php1-billion and Php102-billion forfeiture cases against the Marcoses and their cronies on Sept. 25 and Aug. 5, respective­ly.

The PCGG, however, won a civil forfeiture case against the Marcoses earlier this month, after the Sandiganba­yan Third Division awarded the shares of three sequestere­d companies owned by alleged cronies to the government. ■

 ?? PATRICK ROQUE, CC BY-SA 4.0 ?? An armed forces full honor departure ceremony for Philippine President Ferdinard E. Marcos takes place with Secretary of State, George Shultz, in attendence.
PATRICK ROQUE, CC BY-SA 4.0 An armed forces full honor departure ceremony for Philippine President Ferdinard E. Marcos takes place with Secretary of State, George Shultz, in attendence.

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