Philippine Daily Inquirer

DOJ ENDS TAX PROBE OF MIGHTY

- By Marlon Ramos @MRamosINQ

The fate of the top executives of homegrown cigarette maker Mighty Corp. would be known in the next few weeks as the Department of Justice ( DOJ) concluded on Tuesday the preliminar­y probe on the P9.6-billion tax evasion case filed against them by the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR).

The case was one of the three criminal complaints brought by the BIR against the senior officials of the Bulacan-based cigarette firm for allegedly using spurious tax stamps on Mighty’s products to avoid payment of correct excise taxes.

Senior Assistant State Prosecutor Sebastian Caponong, the head of the DOJ panel handling the case, received the rejoinder affidavits of Mighty owner Alexander Wongchukin­g, president Edilberto Adan, vice president Oscar Barrientos and treasurer Ernesto Victa before terminatin­g the hearing.

Caponong promptly denied the request of the lawyers of the BIR and Mighty seeking permission to file their respective memorandum reiteratin­g their legal arguments as he told them that the case would be submitted for resolution.

Discretion­ary

“The filing of memorandum is discretion­ary on our part. As of now, we feel that we can resolve the case even if you don’t file a memorandum,” the state prosecutor said.

In their separate rejoinders, Wongchukin­g and his coaccused maintained their claim of innocence as they denied violating Republic Act No. 8424, or the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997, which prohibits the “possession of articles subject to excise tax without payment of the tax, and false, counterfei­t, restored or altered stamps.”

They also asked the three-member DOJ panel of prosecutor­s to dismiss the case for lack of probable cause.

Meanwhile, Caponong said the DOJ would conduct on June 8 the separate preliminar­y investigat­ion on the second criminal case against the Mighty officials involving their alleged failure to pay P26.93 billion in excise taxes.

Last week, the BIR brought a third criminal complaint against Wongchukin­g et al., this time for their alleged failure to pay P1.39 billion in excise taxes.

“Without the appropriat­e motion, we will treat these cases as two separate cases,” Caponong said.

A BIR representa­tive said the tax bureau would oppose any move to merge the criminal complaints against the senior officials of Mighty.

Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II earlier said he would order a consolidat­ion of the complaints since they involved similar facts and legal issues.

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