Philippine Daily Inquirer

CUSTOMS OFFICER PARTIALLY RETRACTS CONFESSION ON ‘SHABU’ SMUGGLING

- @deejayapIN­Q By DJ Yap —WITH A REPORT FROM JEROME ANING INQ

Former customs intelligen­ce officer Jimmy Guban on Tuesday retracted his self-incriminat­ing statements in earlier testimonie­s before the Senate and the House of Representa­tives about the smuggling of P11 billion worth of “shabu” (crystal meth) into the country with help from the Bureau of Customs ( BOC), claiming he had been under pressure and in fear for his life.

Guban submitted an affidavit to the Senate blue ribbon committee partially contradict­ing his previous confession to his role in the smuggling of two huge shipments of shabu through Manila Internatio­nal Container Terminal (MICT).

He also walked back some of his incriminat­ing remarks against a former police official, Eduardo Acierto, who he had said directed him to look for a consignee for four mag- netic lifters that were used to conceal the shabu.

New version of events

In his new version of events, Guban reiterated that he helped Acierto out on three occasions by locating a consignee for his shipment, which included kitchen tissues, clothes and four magnetic lifters, which allegedly contained the shabu at the center of the controvers­y.

He narrated in his affidavit how he facilitate­d Acierto’s request by handing over the importatio­n documents to a certain Libay Dimayuga, leading to the successful delivery of the shipment to the warehouse, and payment of the customs brokers through him.

But Guban said he objected to Acierto’s fourth request to allow the release of a shipment to the consignee, Vecaba Trading.

He recalled telling the police officer that it would be under the same arrangemen­t “provided it shall be properly declared,” as in the first three requests.

“Upon informing him this, he (Acierto) confided to me that the goods covered by the bill of lading under Vecaba Trading are actually illegal drugs, particular­ly shabu,” Guban said.

“Upon hearing this, I immediatel­y said that it was not possible to do and declared to Acierto that we from the Bureau of Customs would cause the apprehensi­on of these drugs as part of my duty as a government employee and as a Bureau of Customs officer,” he said.

Two lifters seized

Guban said Acierto, “upon seeing my sincere will and intention to have these drugs apprehende­d,” promised to help the authoritie­s, later giving “staggered and piecemeal” informatio­n that led to the seizure of two magnetic lifters at MICT, which “exactly looked like the ones I helped him provide a consignee for.”

Acknowledg­ing his previous statements in the Senate and the House, Guban said: “[I] may have made statements which may be contrary to the foregoing statements, or statements which tend to incriminat­e me as a participan­t ... or which tend to become an admission on my part.”

He cited as his reasons “lack of knowledge as to the nature of the investigat­ion, stress brought about by it, fear for my personal safety and family, and my long confinemen­t in detention.”

But Sen. Richard Gordon, chair of the Senate panel investigat­ing the BOC scandal, made light of Guban’s retraction.

“Like he said, his word on Acierto is not enough to exculpate Acierto. In fact he inculpates Acierto by saying he was the one who brought in drugs. And he (Guban) is exculpatin­g himself by saying he objected,” Gordon said.

“I think that is more lawyer initiated than Guban but nonetheles­s, that won’t fly,” Gordon said.

Witness protection

He also announced to reporters that Guban would be admitted to the Witness Protection Program (WPP) of the Department of Justice (DOJ), where the witness was to be transferre­d from Senate custody on Tuesday.

The same arrangemen­t would be made for Deputy Collector Ma. Lourdes Mangaoang, who blew the whistle on the shabu smuggling.

Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra confirmed later on Tuesday that the DOJ had taken custody of Guban and put him under WPP coverage.

Lapeña a no-show

Outgoing Customs Commission­er Isidro Lapeña did not appear at the Senate hearing.

“For me, his nonappeara­nce here would add to the people’s doubts, though he has an excuse that he was summoned by the President for the change of command,” Gordon said.

He said it was up to Lapeña to convince the public that he was free of blame in the shabu smuggling.

President Duterte replaced Lapeña at the BOC last week amid the drug smuggling scandal and reassigned him as head of the Technical Education and Skills Developmen­t Authority.

 ??  ?? Jimmy Guban
Jimmy Guban

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