Philippine Daily Inquirer

TRILLANES TO BRING DU30 ARREST ORDER TO SC

- By Leila B. Salaverria @LeilasINQ

After making his reputation as a rebel, Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV is gearing up for a battle in the courts to stop President Duterte from jailing him.

Mr. Duterte, who swore revenge after Trillanes linked him to corruption and one of his sons to illegal drugs and smuggling, and supported petitions to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court seeking his indictment over thousands of alleged extrajudic­ial killings in his brutal war on drugs, voided the amnesty given to the senator as a military rebel in 2011.

Through Presidenti­al Proclamati­on No. 572, which he signed on Aug. 31, Mr. Duterte said he voided Trillanes’ amnesty because the former Philippine Navy lieutenant fell short of the minimum requiremen­ts, including admitting his guilt.

The President ordered the police to arrest

Trillanes and the military to resume court-martial proceeding­s against him that were halted after he was granted amnesty.

Holed up in the Senate to avoid arrest, Trillanes said he would challenge the applicatio­n of the Department of Justice (DOJ) for a warrant to arrest him for rebellion and coup d’état, the charges brought against him for taking part in attempts to overthrow President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in 2003, 2006 and 2007.

He said he would also challenge in the Supreme Court Mr. Duterte’s proclamati­on, which he described as “illegal.”

“To me, this goes beyond political lines because the presidenti­al declaratio­n should alarm the justices of the Supreme Court. It contains [Mr.] Duterte’s exercise of executive, legislativ­e and judicial powers,” Trillanes said.

He said the rebellion and coup d’état charges against him were dismissed in September 2011. He showed reporters court documents to prove that the cases had been dismissed.

Trillanes won the first round against the DOJ on Wednesday after Judge Andres Soriano of the Makati Regional Trial Court (RTC) Branch 148 refused to grant the department’s ex parte motion for a warrant of arrest and hold departure order for the senator without a hearing.

In his order dated Sept. 4, Soriano gave Trillanes five days to comment on the government’s motion and set a hearing for Sept. 13

Soriano said the “very sensitive case” took on “very seri- ous legal issues” so that he had to be “careful.”

Cases dismissed

Soriano noted that the coup charge against Trillanes was dismissed on Sept. 21, 2011, by then acting Judge Maria Rita Sarabia, “pursuant to the grant of amnesty” to him.

He said the separate rebellion charge against Trillanes was dismissed by Judge Elmo Alameda of the Makati RTC Branch 150 on Sept. 7, 2011, also because he had been granted amnesty.

The DOJ did not bring a motion for a warrant of arrest and hold departure order for Trillanes in Branch 150.

Soriano said his court may have jurisdicti­on to hear the factual aspect of the contro- versy, “that is whether Trillanes fulfilled the requiremen­ts for his applicatio­n [for] amnesty.”

Sought for comment, Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra said: “It’s a good sign that the court accepts continuing jurisdicti­on over the case.”

Guevarra said Trillanes could not be arrested without a warrant.

“The police will have to wait for the warrant,” he said.

Resigned from military

In the Senate, Trillanes said he could not be court-martialed because he was no longer a military officer and that he became a civilian after he successful­ly ran for the Senate in 2007.

Trillanes presented documents that showed he resigned from the military on Feb. 6, 2007, and a copy of a general order dated May 3, 2007, on the effectivit­y of his resignatio­n.

He also showed a service clearance dated Aug. 28, 2007, stating that he had no money and property accountabi­lities and could leave the service.

Trillanes said he resigned from the military when he filed his certificat­e of candidacy for the Senate.

He said the documents showed that the Department of National Defense had no jurisdicti­on over him.

 ?? —RICHARDA. REYES ?? COURT RULINGS Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV shows copies of separate rulings issued by the Makati Regional Trial Court in 2011 dismissing the coup and rebellion charges lodged against him by the Arroyo administra­tion, after he was granted amnesty by then President Benigno Aquino III.
—RICHARDA. REYES COURT RULINGS Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV shows copies of separate rulings issued by the Makati Regional Trial Court in 2011 dismissing the coup and rebellion charges lodged against him by the Arroyo administra­tion, after he was granted amnesty by then President Benigno Aquino III.
 ?? —RICHARD A. REYES ?? POLICE PRESENCE Officers from the Philippine National Police Criminal Investigat­ion and Detection Group have maintained a visible presence outside the Philippine Senate building in Pasay City since Tuesday, prompting Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto to ask: “There is no warrant of arrest issued by any court, so what are they doing here?”
—RICHARD A. REYES POLICE PRESENCE Officers from the Philippine National Police Criminal Investigat­ion and Detection Group have maintained a visible presence outside the Philippine Senate building in Pasay City since Tuesday, prompting Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph Recto to ask: “There is no warrant of arrest issued by any court, so what are they doing here?”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines