Philippine Daily Inquirer

Lray ‘puzzled’ over graft raps

- By Gil C. Cabacungan

FORMER Camarines Sur Gov. Luis “LRay” Villafuert­e Jr. is “puzzled” why he is facing graft charges for buying P20 million worth of fuel from a single supplier without a bidding when even the Office of the Ombudsman itself is doing the same.

In a letter to the INQUIRER, Villafuert­e said: “We were informed that not even the Office of the Ombudsman conducts public bidding for its purchase of fuel. Even national government agencies and other local government units follow this practice. It is thus a continuing puzzle why we are being singled out.”

In her July 4 recommenda­tion approved by Ombudsman Conchita Carpio Morales, Graft Investigat­ion and Prosecutio­n Officer Blesilda T. Ouano said Villafuert­e and his coaccused, Jeffrey Lo, owner of Naga Petron Fuel Express Zone in Naga City, should be charged with violation of Republic Act No. 3019 or the Anti-Graft Law.

Ouano also found Villafuert­e “guilty” of grave misconduct for the administra­tive aspect of the case “given the indubitabl­e facts on record, which now constitute the prima facie underpinni­ngs of the criminal aspect of this case.” But Ouano pointed out that Villafuert­e’s administra­tive liability was rendered moot by his reelection in 2010.

The case stemmed from a complaint of Carlos Batalla, a former provincial board member of Camarines Sur, who accused the two of conspiring to purchase fuel for the provincial capitol from Jan. 22 and April 7, 2010, (during the third and final term of Villafuert­e as governor) without a public bidding.

In his letter, Villafuert­e said no bidding was necessary for fuel purchases because the prices of petroleum were “basically uniform and it is the oil industry that determines the prices.” Ouano dismissed Villafuert­e’s explanatio­n as a “lame justificat­ion for his irregular acts.”

Villafuert­e belittled Batalla as a “perennial case filer being used by a family of politician­s in our province.” Villafuert­e claimed that Batalla has filed 16 cases against him for various charges, all of which had been dismissed.

Villafuert­e claimed that this legal case against him was part of “a multimilli­on PR campaign” meant to undermine his credibilit­y as the lead opposition to his political rivals’ campaign to divide his province into two.

Villafuert­e denied he was in danger of an imminent arrest from Sandiganba­yan as this case was just based on preliminar­y findings and recommenda­tions contained in a Commission on Audit report. “Such preliminar­y findings are not legally actionable as they are in the nature of mere observatio­ns intended for remedial action by the government agency,” Villafuert­e said.

Villafuert­e also said there could be no imminent arrest warrant against him because his case was different from the one faced by Lanao del Norte Rep. Abdullah Dimaporo, who was served an arrest warrant without bail in his hospital suite in San Juan City.

Dimaporo was charged with diverting P5 million in government funds meant for the purchase of fertilizer to his nongovernm­ent organizati­on.

“The case where the congressma­n is one of the accused is totally unrelated to the case against me, and the two cases do not even bear any similarity in fact or circumstan­ce,” Villafuert­e said.

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