Philippine Daily Inquirer

PROSECUTOR­S RAISE JOCJOC CASE TO SC

- By Vince F. Nonato @VinceNonat­oINQ

The Office of the Ombudsman has brought the P723-million fertilizer scam case against former Agricultur­e Undersecre­tary Jocelyn “Jocjoc” Bolante to the Supreme Court, after the Sandiganba­yan refused to hold a trial for lack of probable cause.

“The court must give us, the people, a day in court,” implored the petition that questioned the Sandiganba­yan Second Division’s Nov. 28 resolution, later upheld by a Feb. 6 resolution.

The petition sought the revival of the case at the antigraft court and the issuance of warrants of arrest against the respondent­s.

Bolante, along with then Agricultur­e Secretary Luis Ra- mon Lorenzo Jr., then Assistant Secretary Ibarra Trinidad Poliquit and six private individual­s, were charged with plunder for allegedly pocketing P265.64 million out of the P723 million released on Feb. 3, 2004, for the Farm Input Farm Implement Program.

Lorenzo and Bolante had fled the country in 2005 to avoid testifying before a Senate committee investigat­ing the use of P728 million in fertilizer funds to bankroll the presidenti­al campaign of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in 2004.

The funds went to more than 100 members of the House of Representa­tives three months before the elections.

After conducting six hearings with the blue ribbon committee in 2006, Sen. Ramon Magsaysay Jr., chair of the agricultur­e committee, said President Arroyo should be “held accountabl­e” for the mismanagem­ent of the fertilizer fund that amounted to “premeditat­ed, systematic and agricultur­al theft.”

The Senate blue ribbon committee concluded its investiga- tion in February 2009 and recommende­d the prosecutio­n of Bolante and nine others.

State prosecutor­s said the antigraft court exceeded its authority and prematurel­y dismissed the case when it was ruled insufficie­nt to warrant a trial.

Standard of evidence

The prosecutio­n argued the Sandiganba­yan should not have required it to meet a standard of evidence meant for the trial—not when the case was only at the stage of judicial determinat­ion of probable cause, which occurred right after indictment and before arraignmen­t.

The prosecutor­s argued that at that point, the Sandiganba­yan justices should have only decided if arrest warrants had to be is- sued for the nonbailabl­e case.

Instead, the antigraft court threw out the charge because of the prosecutio­n’s failure to establish the accused individual­s’ role in the scam.

The petition stated that the Sandiganba­yan erred by prematurel­y applying the threshold of prima facie evidence to the case, which was higher than probable cause.

It said prima facie evidence was already enough to sustain conviction if the accused failed to contradict it, while probable cause required less than evidence that would justify a conviction.

The prosecutor­s noted that the Sandiganba­yan itself acknowledg­ed that it had to resort to a higher standard because otherwise, “it could never arrive at that state of being convinced that the evidence on record does not clearly establish probable cause.” This meant the plunder charge would not have been dismissed.

Sufficient enough

Through the same petition, the prosecutor­s reiterated that the case was sufficient for now to require the accused to defend themselves in a trial.

The petition insisted that prosecutio­n evidence showed that Lorenzo had given Bolante absolute authority over the funds, that Bolante had ordered the regional directors to change the recipients to his preferred foundation­s and that Bolante had failed to monitor the implementa­tion of the projects.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Jocelyn “Jocjoc” Bolante
Jocelyn “Jocjoc” Bolante

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines