Philippine Daily Inquirer

Ex-Bulacan gov slaps Mercado with P10-M libel suit

- By Ron Lopez and Carmela Reyes-Estrope Inquirer Central Luzon

FORMER Bulacan Gov. Roberto Pagdangana­n has filed a P10million libel complaint against former Makati Vice Mayor Ernesto Mercado and a tabloid reporter for dragging his name into a supposedly anomalous deal that involved a property of the Boy Scouts of the Philippine­s (BSP).

Pagdangana­n, a former BSP president who is now the national organizati­on’s senior vice president, filed the eight-page complaint yesterday against Mercado and Jun Ramirez, a reporter of Tempo, in the Bulacan Prosecutor’s Office.

Mercado earlier filed plunder charges against Pagdangana­n, Vice President Jejomar Binay and 15 other BSP officials over the sale of the organizati­on’s property in Makati City.

Ramirez’s story on Mercado’s filing of a plunder case against Binay—who is also the incumbent BSP national president— and the other officials was published in Tempo’s Oct. 7 issue.

Pagdangana­n accused Mercado of being behind Ramirez’s “malicious” story which claimed that there were irregulari­ties in the BSP property’s sale.

“[Mercado] published or caused [the publicatio­n of] derogatory informatio­n against me when he knew that those were not true. Mercado has no motive except to dishonor or discredit my good name and reputation,” Pagdangana­n said.

“He continued making unfounded allegation­s and mentioned my name as one of those officials whom he charged [in] the Ombudsman,” he added.

Mercado, a former political ally of the Vice President, earlier testified in the Senate about the anomalies allegedly committed by Binay as Makati mayor.

The BSP project involved a joint venture agreement between the organizati­on and Alphaland Developmen­t Inc. (ADI) to develop BSP’s property in Makati City.

The agreement, which was negotiated and signed by Mercado as BSP senior vice president, gave the national organizati­on 15 percent of the developed property’s share while ADI received 85 percent.

Mercado, in his plunder complaint, alleged that the income from the deal estimated to be more than P3 billion could not be accounted for by BSP officials.

“The libelous and defamatory statements issued by respondent­s are utterly false, baseless and misleading. The statements portrayed me and the members of the [BSP] executive board as either corrupt, incompeten­t or indifferen­t,” Pagdangana­n said in his complaint.

“Only the Ombudsman is authorized to publicize matters covered by its investigat­ion and only when circumstan­ces so warrant and with due prudence and in this instance, the publicatio­n must be balanced, fair and true,” he said.

In an interview, Pagdangana­n claimed that the plunder case was meant to destroy the names of BSP officials deemed to be close to Binay.

“I [was] not even present during the time the agreement was approved, and [Mercado] knows it. It is clearly meant to harass me,” he added, noting that he has yet to receive a copy of the plunder complaint.

According to Pagdangana­n, the BSP’s share from the sale of the property remains intact. The BSP, he said, was also earning from lease contracts on the property, with the revenues being used to help other BSP councils.

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