Business World

Indictment of Duterte’s ex-police chief sought

- Vann Marlo M. Villegas

PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte’s former police chief and 13 other cops should be charged for their involvemen­t in the recycling of illegal drugs from a legitimate police operation in 2013, the Philippine National Police said.

In a reply, the PNP-Criminal Investigat­ion and Detection Group (CIDG) asked the Justice department to indict the police officers for graft and drug traffickin­g in a reopened case.

“In this amended complaint, the respondent­s proffered more general denial and alibi as defence, which jurisprude­nce has long considered weak and unreliable,” the police said.

The CIDG also argued the reinvestig­ation of the case, which was dismissed in 2014, does not violate the police officers’ rights.

“Their liberty was not deprived without due process of law and they are still presumed innocent until the contrary is proved,” it said. “They have a right to speedy dispositio­n of the case. Verily, their argument challengin­g the authority is misplaced in this legal battle,” it added.

Mr. Albayalde challenged the authority of the Justice department to reopen the complaint, noting that a preliminar­y probe may only be re-opened when it has been submitted for resolution but before its promulgati­on.

A Senate committee earlier recommende­d the filing of criminal charges against the police officers.

Government prosecutor­s have given the officers until Nov. 18 to answer the CIDG’s reply.

The Justice department re-opened the case after former CIDG chief Benjamin B. Magalong, now Baguio City mayor, disclosed at a Senate hearing last month the involvemen­t of the 13 cops in a questionab­le buybust operation on Nov. 29, 2013.

The cops claimed to have seized 38 kilos of drugs but an investigat­ion showed that they seized about 200 kilos of illegal drugs worth P648 million and about P10 million in cash. The suspected drug trafficker also paid them P50 million to present a different person, Mr. Magalong said.

Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency Director General Aaron N. Aquino told senators that during a probe when he was still Central Luzon regional director, Mr. Albayalde, then acting regional director for Metro Manila, had sought to stop the dismissal of the 13 cops in 2016. —

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