Philippine Daily Inquirer

Palace: EX-PNP chief’s fate up to prosecutor­s

- By Julie M. Aurelio @Jmaurelioi­nq

Malacañang will not yet pass judgment on former top cop Oscar Albayalde and will leave it to prosecutor­s to assess if he should be charged for the drug recycling case of his former subordinat­es.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Salvador Panelo said prosecutor­s would be the ones to determine if there is probable cause to also indict the resigned Philippine National Police chief in the case.

“Whatever the findings, the recommenda­tion is up to them [the Senate]. But whether or not the cases will be filed and the nature of the case filed against them, will be the discretion of the prosecutor­s who will assess the evidence,” Panelo said in an interview over dziq.

He pointed out that “whether they are guilty or not is up to the courts, assuming it passes the prosecutor­s’ level.”

“If there are charges, they should file it. There will be a trial in the courts if it passes the level of the one investigat­ing in the prosecutio­n department,” Panelo said.

Malfeasanc­e committed He made the remarks after a Senate joint panel recommende­d the filing of illegal drugs and graft charges against Albayalde and 13 so-called ninja cops, who were his former subordinat­es when he was Pampanga provincial police director.

A preliminar­y report claimed that Albayalde allegedly committed malfeasanc­e for intervenin­g for his subordinat­es, who were supposed to be dismissed from the service but were only demoted.

Panelo said the President would still wait for the findings of the Department of the Interior and Local Government’s (DILG) own probe into the 2013 ninja cops scandal involving Albayalde’s men.

“He will act on the recommenda­tion of DILG secretary (Eduardo Año) on his investigat­ion. He said he will not interfere with the Senate investigat­ion and that he will wait for the DILG investigat­ion since the PNP is under the DILG,” the Palace official said.

Last week, Mr. Duterte expressed his “utmost disappoint­ment” with the reported involvemen­t of policemen in the recycling of seized illegal drugs.

In a speech at the Manila Hotel last Thursday, he said ninja cops were “gangsters” and warned them that he could beat them at being evil, since they do not have the monopoly of being evil.

“I think that’s a very stupid paradigm because I can be evil like you and more than if I want to be,” the President said last week.

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