Philippine Daily Inquirer

Marcos case junking upheld by Sandigan

- By Patricia Denise M. Chiu @PDMCHIUINQ

The Sandiganba­yan Second Division has affirmed its decision to dismiss the P1.052-billion forfeiture case against former dictator Ferdinand Marcos, his wife Imelda and the Tantoco couple, owners of the Rustan Group of Companies.

In a resolution, the antigraft court denied the motion for reconsider­ation filed by the government since there was no new argument presented that would merit the reversal of the decision.

No new argument

“In this case, no new argument was presented by plaintiff Republic of the Philippine­s in the instant motion. The arguments raised therein have already been judiciousl­y passed upon and properly considered by the court in the assailed decision, which states that the documentar­y and testimonia­l evidence presented by the plaintiff are insufficie­nt to prove the allegation­s in the expanded complaint,” the resolution, dated Nov. 20 but released on Friday said.

In September, the Sandiganba­yan dismissed another forfeiture case against the Marcoses due to insufficie­ncy of evidence to prove that Bienvenido Tantoco and his relatives acted as dummies of Marcos and his family in acquiring expensive assets.

Allegation­s not proven

In the original expanded complaint, Tantocos, along with the Marcoses were accused of reconveyan­ce, reversion, accounting, restitutio­n and damages as they allegedly acquired the franchise to operate duty-free shops meant to conceal the ownership of the alleged illegally obtained assets.

But in its decision to dismiss the case, the antigraft court said the Presidenti­al Commission on Good Government (PCGG), the agency tasked to recover the dictator’s ill-gotten wealth, failed to prove the allegation­s.

The court also dismissed the case since PCGG merely presented as evidence Tantoco’s

letters to Marcos asking for favors. Only four witnesses were called to the stand.

The Sandiganba­yan then said these weren’t enough to prove that the Tantocos were dummies of the Marcoses.

No new evidence

Earlier this month, the Sandiganba­yan allowed the Philippine government, through the prosecutio­n to file a motion for reconsider­ation.

In the said motion, the prosecutio­n argued that several of the defendants’ pleadings related to the case actually admitted to the allegation­s in the complaint pertaining to the illgotten nature of Tourist Duty Free Shops assets.

Because of these supposed admissions, the prosecutio­n argued that the material allegation­s in the complaint have in fact been sufficient­ly establishe­d.

However, the antigraft court did not agree. It upheld the earlier dismissal since the prosecutio­n did not present any new evidence that would merit a different decision.

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