Philippine Daily Inquirer

Ferraris, Porsches to be wrecked

Sports and other cars smuggled into Cagayan port to be sent to crusher

- —STORY BYMELVIN GASCON

TUGUEGARAO CITY— Show-offs will no longer have a source of cheap Ferraris, Porsches, Benzes or Lamborghin­is if the head of the Cagayan Export Zone Authority (Ceza) makes good his promise to destroy the sports cars smuggled into Ceza through the Santa Ana port in Cagayan province. Raul Lambino, Ceza chief, said he was bent on getting rid of the “fruits of the poisonous tree.”

TUGUEGARAO CITY— At least 100 imported luxury cars in a warehouse at the Cagayan Special Economic Zone and Freeport (CSEZF) in Port Irene in Santa Ana town, Cagayan province, will be crushed and destroyed, according to lawyer Raul Lambino, administra­tor of the Cagayan Economic Zone Authority (Ceza).

Lambino said he would order the destructio­n of the cars, some of them Ferraris, Porsches and Lamborghin­is, to send a message that the government was serious about its campaign against smuggling.

“Those cars will be sent to the crusher, definitely. Wemust destroy those to deliver a message that we will not tolerate activities like that,” he said, referring to the anomalous importatio­n of secondhand vehicles using privileges granted to the Cagayan economic zone.

At least 900 vehicles were shipped into Santa Ana port in 2013 despite a government ban. These vehicles have since been kept in a warehouse at Port Irene.

The luxury cars targeted for destructio­n were among four shipments of 1,352 used vehicles that arrived at Port Irene from December 2012 to February 2013.

Right-hand drives

These included 53 Mercedes Benz sports cars; 30 Hummers; 21 BMWs of various models; seven Porsches consisting of 911, Boxster and Carrera units; a Ferrari F355 Berlinetta; and a Lamborghin­i Murcielago.

The rest of the vehicles were right-hand drive passenger vans, sedans and mini wagons. These are now parked in a fivehectar­e yard in Casambalan­gan, a village about a kilometer from Port Irene.

Lambino, however, said no criminal charges would be filed against persons responsibl­e for the importatio­n because no one had claimed ownership of the cars yet.

According to documents obtained by the Inquirer, the vehicles were brought in by Fenix (Ceza) Inc., which was engaged in used car importatio­n at the Cagayan free port.

These vehicles have not been registered and sold outside the zone after the Bureau of Customs (BOC) banned their importatio­n.

Poisonous fruit

Lambino dismissed earlier plans to have the vehicles registered and then auctioned off or donated to be used as ambulances or hearses.

“We cannot allow that because these are considered fruits of the poisonous tree,” he said, adding that it was a principle in law that no benefit could be derived from anything obtained through unlawful means.

But he said the fate of the luxury cars and other vehicles rested on President Duterte, who has direct supervisio­n and control of Ceza.

The Inquirer on Thursday tried but failed to reach officials of Fenix.

The used car trade at the CSEZF had been riddled with controvers­ies after the American Chamber of Commerce, invoking a 2006 Supreme Court ruling, questioned its operations in 2008.

This led to a series of lawsuits and counter-suits among the group of car importers and the BOC and Ceza. Despite the legal squabbles, car shipments, which included a fleet of luxury vehicles, continued to arrive at Port Irene.

In early 2013, then BOC Commission­er Ruffy Biazon stopped the processing of used vehicles imported through Port Irene, citing a separate Supreme Court ruling that banned the practice.

These are considered fruits of the poisonous tree . . . Raul Lambino Ceza administra­tor

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 ?? —RICHARD BALONGLONG ?? AMercedes Benz sports car is unloaded at Santa Ana port in Cagayan province.
—RICHARD BALONGLONG AMercedes Benz sports car is unloaded at Santa Ana port in Cagayan province.

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