Philippine Daily Inquirer

Gigi Reyes won’t share Enrile luck as her bail bid rejected

- By Vince F. Nonato @VinceNonat­oINQ

Unlike her former boss and mentor, Juan Ponce Enrile, Jessica Lucila “Gigi” Reyes will stay in jail.

The antigraft court Sandiganba­yan’s Third Division has denied Reyes’ motion for bail in a unanimous 16-page resolution dated June 28.

It said the testimonie­s of pork barrel scam whistleblo­wers “remain trustworth­y,” and evidence of Reyes’ guilt was strong enough to keep her detained pending trial for a P172.8million plunder case which Enrile faces, too.

Even if whistleblo­wers Benhur Luy, Merlina Suñas and Marina Sula never met Reyes in person, the court said this had “no significan­t impact on the reliabilit­y of their respective testimonie­s.”

Detailed testimony

The court still gave weight to their “detailed” explanatio­n of the scheme to divert Enrile’s Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund (PDAF) allocation­s, or pork, to ghost projects of bogus foundation­s allegedly controlled by businesswo­man Janet Lim-Napoles.

The court added that the three Napoles employees’ testimony “substantiv­ely corroborat­ed” the Commission on Audit (COA) findings of irregulari­ties in the use of legislator­s’ PDAF.

Luy testified that Ruby Tuason, another prosecutio­n witness, acted as Enrile’s middleman. Tuason, meanwhile, claimed to have delivered the kickbacks from the ghost projects to Reyes from 2006 to 2009.

The court continued to give credence to the testimony of Tuason, even if she could not recall the exact amount she supposedly received as well as the specific projects for which she delivered the commission­s.

Reyes’ signatures

“This court cannot fault her for her inability to clearly remember specific details of events that transpired over 10 years ago,” the resolution read.

For the court, Reyes’ signing of the endorsemen­t letters for the spurious livelihood projects “triggered the start of the scheme.”

This was despite the COA’s lack of findings that Reyes signed other project documents, like project proposals, memorandum­s of agreement, accomplish­ment reports, inspection reports and disburseme­nt reports, afterward.

The Sandiganba­yan applied to Reyes’ case its denial of Napoles’ bail motion, which the Supreme Court upheld in a Nov. 7, 2017, decision.

“This court finds no sound reason not to adopt the same,” the Sandiganba­yan said.

Corroborat­ion

The high court had said in Napoles’ case that the whistle- blowers’ testimonie­s were “consistent, clear and corroborat­ive of each other.”

Still, the Sandiganba­yan clarified that the denial of Reyes’ bail “does not in any manner determine the ultimate outcome of these cases.”

Enrile’s plunder case has yet to go to trial unlike the cases of fellow former opposition Senators Bong Revilla and Jinggoy Estrada.

The resolution was penned by Associate Justice Bernelito R. Fernandez and concurred in by Presiding Justice Amparo M. Cabotaje-Tang and Associate Justice Sarah Jane T. Fernandez.

This was the second time Reyes failed in her bid to walk out of detention. Reyes filed her May 29, 2017, motion for bail after the court, on Jan. 3, 2017, denied her motion to quash the plunder charge for alleged defects.

Jail colleagues

Reyes and Napoles are currently detained at the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology facility in Camp Bagong Diwa, Taguig City.

The 94-year-old Enrile was allowed by the Supreme Court to post bail through a controvers­ial August 2015 ruling that cited “special, humanitari­an and compelling circumstan­ces.”

Defendants accused of plunder are normally not allowed to post bail unless evidence of guilt is not strong.

 ?? —INQUIRER FILE PHOTO ?? DOWNFALL Jessica Lucila “Gigi” Reyes arriving at the Sandiganba­yan for her trial.
—INQUIRER FILE PHOTO DOWNFALL Jessica Lucila “Gigi” Reyes arriving at the Sandiganba­yan for her trial.

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