Philippine Daily Inquirer

Key defense witness is lawyer-accountant

Testimony of Corona seen as trial climax

- By Christian V. Esguerra

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DEFENSE LAWYERS are gearing up for a crucial phase in the proceeding­s, putting “finishing touches” on the testimony of a key witness who will “lay the groundwork” for Chief Justice Renato Corona’s likely appearance as the “climax” of the impeachmen­t trial.

Describing Article 2 of the impeachmen­t complaint as the real “battlegrou­nd,” defense counsel Ramon Esguerra said the witness—a lawyer and a certified public accountant (CPA) —would discuss in detail that “there is every justificat­ion for the entries” in Corona’s statements of assets, liabilitie­s and net worth (SALN).

Esguerra said the Chief Justice would then explain the sources of money declared in the SALNS, including those used to purchase properties mentioned in the documents.

“The emerging consensus is he will take the stand,” Esguerra told the INQUIRER in an interview shortly after Corona met with his 12 lawyers for around three hours in Makati City on Friday afternoon.

Asked how soon the Chief Justice would testify, the defense counsel said: “I think logically, he should be the last to take the (witness) stand be-

cause it would be anticlimac­tic if he would come first.”

Trial will resume on March 12 with the defense presentati­on after the prosecutio­n rested its case last week.

Article 2 alleges that Corona failed to publicly disclose his SALNS and thus, committed a culpable violation of the Constituti­on.

Esguerra (no relation to this reporter) said Corona made it clear to his lawyers that he had “no problem” testifying in his own impeachmen­t trial. “It cannot be foreclosed,” he said.

In the defense panel’s list of witnesses and documents submitted to the impeachmen­t court on Jan. 31, the Cpa-lawyer was not named but was described as an “expert witness” who would “testify that CJ Corona did not violate the Constituti­on and pertinent laws on the SALN, and that (his) assets came from legitimate sources and the values he used thereon have legal basis.”

The testimony will be backed by documentar­y evidence purportedl­y showing that Corona “also received allowances and other emoluments as justice of the Supreme Court” and that “he and his wife have the lawful means to acquire the alleged properties.”

Allowances

Among the evidence would be two separate certificat­ions dated Jan. 5, 2012, regarding the “per diem/allowances” received by Corona as a member of the House of Representa­tives Electoral Tribunal and the Senate Electoral Tribunal.

The defense would also present a separate Jan. 9, 2012, certificat­ion on Corona’s “salaries, allowances and other emoluments as Justice of the Supreme Court covering the period of April 9, 2002, to Dec. 31, 2011.”

One concern earlier raised by the lead defense counsel, Serafin Cuevas, was that senatorjud­ges could quiz Corona “on all angles” and defense lawyers could not object under the impeachmen­t trial rules.

Esguerra acknowledg­ed that possibilit­y, saying his camp was trying to avoid a situation where Corona “becomes helpless there as a witness.”

But he said that would only happen if a witness would not be telling the truth.

“It is not difficult if you are telling the truth, no matter how it is turned upside down,” Esguerra said in Filipino.

“You will wonder—why did he decide to fight on if he really was hiding anything? On the properties, why would he put them under his name if he wanted to hide them? He should have come up with a dummy, put up some corporatio­n. He’s a lawyer, remember.”

Delay in declaring unit

One such property is Corona’s condominiu­m unit at The Columns in Makati, which, the prosecutio­n pointed out, was reflected only in his 2010 SALN when the certificat­e of title was issued on Nov. 3, 2004.

In a legal memorandum dated Feb. 16, Corona’s camp argued that “he became the full owner of the Columns unit only in 2009, when he took actual possession.”

“CJ Corona refused to accept delivery in order to preserve his right to pursue legal remedies against the developer for the repair of the defects and damage to the Columns unit,” according to the memorandum. “For this reason, CJ Corona could not mention the Columns unit in his SALN before 2010.”

Esguerra said the defense would have to “recast” its list of witnesses owing to the withdrawal of the five other articles of impeachmen­t, and by virtue of the Supreme Court’s Feb. 14 resolution preventing its members or employees from testifying because of “judicial privilege.”

The resolution meant that the defense could not present Justices Presbitero Velasco, Roberto Abad and/or Arturo Brion for Article 7.

The article alleges that Corona had favored former President and now Pampanga Rep. Gloria Macapagal-arroyo through the court’s issuance of a temporary restrainin­g order (TRO) allowing her to seek medical treatment abroad last year.

What would probably be left for the defense would be consti- tutionalis­t Fr. Joaquin Bernas, whose testimony would cover “the substantia­l issue of the WLO (watch-list order) being subject to judicial review for which the assailed TRO was issued in consonance with the constituti­onal guarantee of liberty to travel,” according to the Jan. 31 list of witnesses.

Upper hand

Sen. Joker Arroyo yesterday said the prosecutio­n currently had the upper hand, having presented its evidence.

Arroyo said senators were now confronted with the problem of appreciati­ng the evidence required to either convict or acquit the Chief Justice.

“Even evidence that has been excluded by the Senate will unavoidabl­y linger in the minds of the senators,” he said in a phone interview.

Asked which side had the advantage at this stage, Arroyo replied: “The prosecutio­n because they have already presented their evidence and even the public seems to lose interest in the proceeding­s.”

Senators who are nonlawyers were likely to “look at the evidence in the same way the general public looks at it, the overall impact on their consciousn­ess unruffled by the fine distinctio­ns it entails,” he said.

The senator said it was right for the prosecutio­n to drop the five remaining charges against Corona and just focus on the three articles of impeachmen­t, evidence on which they had presented in seven weeks of trial so far.

“Why waste and scatter efforts and good will on the five articles they belatedly found out to be weak? Their concentrat­ion on three articles strengthen­s their position and they don’t lose any advantage,” Arroyo said.

But he admitted that prosecutor­s were “hampered by the haphazard and ill-prepared articles of impeachmen­t.”

 ?? Monday, March 5, 2012
13 sections / Vol. 27
/ No. 88
P18
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Monday, March 5, 2012 13 sections / Vol. 27 / No. 88 P18 NIÑO JESUS ORBETA Mobile Alert: www.inquirer.net Radyo Inquirer DZIQ 990AM WALK WITH A VIEW With the onset of summer, tourists negotiate a 100-meter hanging bridge on Lignon Hill in Legazpi City in Albay near the airport. The hill has an elevation of 156 meters and...
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