Philippine Daily Inquirer

Binays’ bid for separate trials nixed

- By Vince F. Nonato @VinceNonat­oINQ

The antigraft court has upheld its earlier ruling that former Vice President Jejomar Binay and his son could be tried together in connection with the controvers­ial P2.2-billion Makati City Hall carpark building.

In a nine-page resolution on May 26 made public on Tuesday, the Third Division of the Sandiganba­yan rejected Binay’s appeal of its Jan. 31 decision justifying the consolidat­ion of the charges against him and his son, Jejomar Erwin Binay Jr.

Binay had petitioned the antigraft court to reraffle his criminal cases separate from his son’s in the allegedly anomalous constructi­on of the carpark during their successive terms as mayor.

Instead of raffling off separate cases when they were filed against Binay in July 2016, after he stepped down as Vice President, the Sandiganba­yan consolidat­ed the charges against him with those of his son, which were filed five months earlier.

In all, Binay faces four counts of graft, one count of malversati­on, and nine counts of falsificat­ion of public documents for the first three phases of the project while his son, who was then a councilor, was charged with two counts of graft and one count of malversati­on.

Prosecutor­s charged his son, already a mayor, with two counts of graft and six counts of malversati­on for the last two phases of the project.

The antigraft court said Binay’s claim that the automatic consolidat­ion of cases violated its own rules was baseless.

It said the Rules of Criminal Procedure allowed it to determine the necessity of a joint trial. It also said the charges against father and son “essentiall­y emanate from similar or the same transactio­ns” and were “not totally unrelated.”

The Office of the Ombudsman alleged that both Binays disregarde­d the procuremen­t processes and paid P11 million to Mana Architectu­re and Interior Design Co.—one of the contractor­s—despite its failure to perform its obligation­s.

The Binays also allegedly failed to follow procuremen­t requiremen­ts and made anomalous payments to Hilmarc’s Constructi­on Corp., which was awarded three contracts worth P1.486 billion through an alleged rigged bidding.

The latest ruling, penned by Justice Sarah Jane T. Fernandez, said Binay failed to raise new arguments that could reverse the court’s January decision. The two other members of the division concurred with her—Presiding Justice Amparo M. Cabotaje-Tang and Justice Zaldy V. Trespeses.

 ??  ?? Jejomar Binay Jr.
Jejomar Binay Jr.
 ??  ?? Jejomar Binay Sr.
Jejomar Binay Sr.

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