Philippine Daily Inquirer

Sandigan junks JPE bid to stop trial

- BY VINCE F. NONATO AND INQUIRE R RESEARCH —STORY

The antigraft court has denied former Sen. Juan Ponce Enrile’s appeal to throw out his P172.83million plunder case in relation to the pork barrel scam in the absence of new arguments to reverse its Jan. 31 resolution denying his motion to quash. Enrile earlier argued that the charge did not cite the “particular overt acts” of plunder.

The P172.83-million plunder case of former Sen. Juan Ponce Enrile in connection with the pork barrel scam is sufficient enough to proceed to trial, according to the Sandiganba­yan.

In a 19- page resolution on Thursday, the antigraft court’s Third Division denied Enrile’s appeal to throw out the charge on the grounds that the allegation­s do not constitute the elements of a valid plunder case.

The court affirmed the sufficienc­y of the case and said the defense failed to raise new arguments to warrant the reversal of its Jan. 31 resolution that first denied his motion to quash.

Enrile was charged with plunder and 15 counts of graft in the Sandiganba­yan in June 2014 in connection with his alleged diversion of his Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund allocation­s to fake nongovernm­ent organizati­ons controlled by businesswo­man Janet Lim-Napoles.

He was accused of amassing P172.83 million in “commission­s” from 2003 to 2010 in collaborat­ion with his former chief of staff, Jessica Lucila “Gigi” Reyes, Napoles and her driver-bodyguard John Raymund de Asis.

Enrile had questioned the June 2014 charge sheet because it supposedly did not state the “particular overt acts” showing unjust enrichment.

He also raised the lack of finer details on his alleged receipt of the kickbacks and the lack of enumeratio­n of anomalous projects linked to alleged scam mastermind Napoles.

But the court maintained that the alleged acts of receiving kickbacks and taking advantage of his official position were the “overt acts or predicate crimes” stated to make a case for plunder.

Lagging behind

Enrile’s plunder case is currently lagging behind those of detained former Senators Bong Revilla Jr. and Jinggoy Estrada, whose trials are currently scheduled to begin in June— three years after being charged in connection with the multibilli­on-peso scam.

The Enrile camp’s legal maneuvers have prevented the pretrial from proceeding.

Enrile first tried to ask for a bill of particular­s to make the allegation­s more specific. The Sandiganba­yan’s denial of the request prompted him to go to the Supreme Court, which ordered prosecutor­s to detail the charges in August 2015.

The Office of the Ombudsman complied and the Supreme Court “noted” its action in June 2016.

But Enrile was not satisfied by the additional details provided by prosecutor­s, so he sought to quash the case.

The Sandiganba­yan in January said that by requesting a bill of particular­s, Enrile “impliedly admitted” the validity of the charge and only wanted more informatio­n so he can mount a proper defense.

It added that the nitty-gritty of the plunder allegation­s are “evidentiar­y matters” best threshed out during trial, the court said.

The 93-year-old politician is currently out on bail for an otherwise nonbailabl­e offense after the Supreme Court, voting 8-4, in August 2015 controvers­ially allowed him to do so on “humanitari­an considerat­ions.”

What went before

After the Sandiganba­yan’s Third Division ordered his arrest on graft and plunder charges, Enrile turned himself in to the Philippine National Police in July 2014 and was detained at the PNP General Hospital in Camp Crame.

In August 2014, Enrile asked the Supreme Court to stop the Sandiganba­yan from hearing his plunder case. He also asked the high court to nullify the Sandiganba­yan decision denying his motion for bill of particular­s for being issued with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of, or in excess of jurisdicti­on.

In April 2016, the high court affirmed with finality its order to the Ombudsman to detail in a bill of particular­s the state’s plunder and graft charges against Enrile.

The Supreme Court gave the Ombudsman “a nonextendi­ble period” of 15 days to submit the bill of particular­s containing “material and necessary” facts of its allegation­s against Enrile.

In November 2016, Enrile, responding to the government’s opposition, reiterated that the Sandiganba­yan should quash the plunder case filed against him as prosecutor­s had failed to show why the charge should be deemed valid.

Enrile’s pending bid to throw out the case for vagueness and lack of probable cause arose from the Supreme Court’s April 11, 2016 decision ordering prosecutor­s to clarify the charges through a bill of particular­s.

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