Philippine Daily Inquirer

Lab test kills drug angle in Llana slay

- By Michael B. Jaucian and Mar S. Arguelles @InquirerSL­B —WITH REPORT FROMLEILA B. SALAVERRIA INQ

DARAGA, ALBAY—

Results of police crime lab tests showed that the white crystallin­e substance found in several sachets inside a sling bag initially thought to belong to slain broadcaste­r Joey Llana was not “shabu” (crystal meth), police said on Saturday.

The crime lab results said the substance inside the eight plastic sachets was not shabu, Supt. Benito Dipad, Daraga town police chief, said.

Dipad said the crime lab result eliminated the possibilit­y that Llana’s killing was drug-related.

Llana was also not on the list of drug suspects in the government’s watch list.

Dipad, quoting the laboratory report, said urine sample taken from Llana also yielded negative for drugs.

Llana was gunned down on Friday while leaving his home at the village of Peñafranci­a in Daraga town, Albay province to go to work at radio station dwZRwhere he has a block time program.

No fingerprin­ts

The sling bag was found by investigat­ors inside his car beside his bullet riddled body.

Chief Supt. Arnel Escobal, Bicol police director, also said Llana’s fingerprin­ts were not found on the bag and the lighter found inside it.

One of President Duterte’s harshest critic, detained Sen. Leila de Lima said Llana’s killing was another glaring example of the culture of violence that is now prevailing in the country.

De Lima blasted the Palace for condemning Llana’s killing when, according to her, Mr. Duterte himself has been responsibl­e for bloodshed in the country.

Llana’s killing was yet another example of the impunity that has reigned in the country since Mr. Duterte began his war on ille- gal drugs that has led to thousands of vigilante killings and deaths of suspects in police operations, De Lima said.

Not surprising

“And frankly, to my mind, presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque’s condemnati­on of this killing and promise of justice sound hypocritic­al,” De Lima said in a statement.

“What could we expect but a spiral of violence and bloodshed when the centerpiec­e program of the government, its all-out war against drugs, gave license to security forces and vigilantes to kill?” she said.

Police have not done much to investigat­e drug-related killings and had allowed “masked killers” to roam the streets, she added.

If Llana’s killing was found to be work-related, he would be the 12th journalist killed under the Duterte administra­tion. De Lima said she was worried that the number would rise.

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