Philippine Daily Inquirer

Villafuert­e, CamSur execs told to return P24.75M

- By Vince F. Nonato @VinceNonat­oINQ

The Commission on Audit (COA) has ordered Camarines Sur 2nd Dist. Rep. Luis Raymund Villafuert­e Jr. and other officials to return to the government P24.75 million spent on a private foundation unlawfully created by the provincial government.

In a decision made public recently, the COA also directed its Prosecutio­n and Litigation Office to bring the matter to the Ombudsman for investigat­ion into possible charges against Villafuert­e and the provincial officials.

Aside from Villafuert­e, also held liable were his then subordinat­es: provincial budget officer Fortunato Peña; provincial treasurer Mario Alicaway; and provincial accountant Leticia Aliorde.

Foundation as partner

The decision affirmed the 2007 notices of disallowan­ce on the public funds transferre­d to the Camarines Sur Kaogma Foundation Inc. from August 2005 to May 2006, when Villa- fuerte was still the province’s governor.

Notices of disallowan­ce

The foundation was tapped by the Sanggunian­g Panlalawig­an to be the province’s partner in institutio­nalizing the activities of the Kaogma Festival—which celebrates the province’s creation during summer—and to promote tourism.

Villafuert­e was named an incorporat­or of the foundation, although he was acting on behalf of the provincial government.

In 2007, auditors issued 19 notices of disallowan­ce on the transactio­ns due to violations of Section 89 of the Local Government Code, which prohibits offi- cials from engaging in business transactio­ns with the local government to which they belong.

The notices were first upheld by the COA’s Bicol regional office in June 2012.

In denying the findings of conflict of interest and irregulari­ty, Villafuert­e argued that Kaogma Foundation Inc. was actually a government corporatio­n because the provincial government contribute­d P1 million in initial paid-up capital.

But the COA noted that the province was not named as an incorporat­or and the amount was indicated as Villafuert­e’s share. It thus considered Kaogma Foundation Inc. to be a private corporatio­n.

The COA also acknowledg­ed that Villafuert­e was merely acting on behalf of the provincial government as stated in the Sanggunian resolution. Still, the transactio­n with Kaogma Foundation Inc. would remain irregular because local government units did not have the power to create private corporatio­ns.

The COA pointed out that if Congress itself was prohibited by the Constituti­on from creating private corporatio­ns, this would all the more be the case for provincial government­s.

‘Absurd situation’

It added that COA Circular No. 96-003 required that a nongovernm­ental organizati­on’s personalit­y “does not overlap with that of the LGU,” in order to avoid the “absurd situation where government becomes a partner of itself.”

The Corporatio­n Code of the Philippine­s also requires incorporat­ors to be natural persons, which a province is not.

The COA also rejected Villafuert­e’s argument that incorporat­ors like him did not earn income from Kaogma Foundation Inc. because it was a nonstock, nonprofit corporatio­n.

It said actual profit was not a requiremen­t for the Local Government Code’s prohibitio­n to apply in this case.

The COA said Villafuert­e violated the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act, which prohibited government officials from having interest in any deal connected to their posts.

 ??  ?? Luis Raymund Villafuert­e Jr.
Luis Raymund Villafuert­e Jr.

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