Philippine Daily Inquirer

JUDGE PARADEZA’S BALLSY DECISION

- SOLITA COLLAS-MONSOD solita_monsod@yahoo.com

Will wonders never cease? Just when one thinks that the judiciary is completely under the thumb of the executive, one gets zapped by the news that a Regional Trial Court judge has in effect told the justice secretary, his prosecutor­s, and the National Bureau of Investigat­ion where to get off.

That is what Judge Richard A. Paradeza did, sans the legal verbiage, as presiding judge of RTC Branch 72 in Olongapo City. He granted the motion to quash the charge against defendant Ronnel A. Mas of inciting to sedition, which arose from Mas tweeting “I will give 50 million reward kung sinong makakapata­y kay Duterte, #NOTOABSCBN­SHUTDOWN.” The case, ruled Judge Paradeza, is considered “DISMISSED.”

Reader, you’ve got to admit that this judge has, well, balls, taking on the executive like that. How many times has that happened the past four years? Only twice, if my recollecti­on is correct.

Of course, the Paradeza decision was dotted with sentences to soften the blow, like, “The Court finds the text posted... despicable and provocativ­e,” and “the act of the NBI in conducting immediate investigat­ion… is laudable and commendabl­e.” Also “the NBI operatives inadverten­tly committed some lapses along the way.”

But the blow was there. And it resonates very loudly under present circumstan­ces, with the anti-terrorism bill hanging over our heads. In Judge Paradeza’s judgment,

1) The warrantles­s arrest conducted by the NBI was illegal. Judge Paradeza emphasized that this was the ruling of the inquest prosecutor herself, because the arrest did not fall under the scope of valid warrantles­s arrests under some rule (113) of the Rules of Court.

2) But the inquest prosecutor also argued that the defect was “cured” by the subsequent acts of Mas, when he admitted extrajudic­ially before the media that he owned the Twitter account and had posted the text. Here, the good judge disagreed. The illegality of the arrest can only be cured if the accused waived objection thereto, which Mas did not do, because he came before Judge Paradeza precisely to object to the arraignmen­t.

Moreover, Judge Paradeza pointed out, there was NOTHING in the records of the case presented by the prosecutio­n to show that there was such an extrajudic­ial admission. Not only that: There was no mention of this admission in the complaint made by the NBI to the inquest prosecutor. I guess this is what he meant by “the NBI inadverten­tly committed some lapses.”

But, even if there was some record, it would still not be acceptable, because even extrajudic­ial confession­s must conform to constituti­onal requiremen­ts (e.g., presence of counsel, etc.).

To me, Judge Paradeza’s most telling statement was: “Even the worst criminals have constituti­onal rights, too. In identifyin­g or arresting the suspect/s, their constituti­onal rights should be recognized and respected.” Oops, Judge. Isn’t that stepping on President Duterte’s toes? Didn’t he say that drug users are no longer human?

Who is Judge Paradeza? I tried googling him, calling his office (according to the operator, his number, and of all the RTCS in Olongapo, were “not yet in service”), and finally called unimpeacha­ble sources. Here’s what I found.

He is “maayos.” And gets himself into trouble because of this. Example: When an MTC judge was being investigat­ed for gross derelictio­n of duty, Judge Paradeza did not hesitate to execute an affidavit that the MTC judge had tried to bribe him for a favorable decision. This you can google. The MTC judge was dismissed, which did not sit well with the “compañeros.” He does not play along.

He inhibited himself from a case at the request of one of the parties, if only to ensure that there would be no accusation­s of bias later on.

An administra­tive case was brought up against him in the Supreme Court sometime in 2016. The charge: a P1-million extortion try. I have no idea what happened, but since he is still a judge, the Supreme Court must have ruled in his favor.

Finally, Reader, please note: His decisions are speedy. It’s been barely a month since this case was brought up, and already, he has quashed and dismissed the case. He has apparently handled other cases with similar speed. Contrast this with Sen. Leila de Lima’s cases, still going along after three years, and she hasn’t been granted bail.

Conclusion: Judge Paradeza is a refreshing example of an independen­t judiciary. Unfortunat­ely, he is in the minority. But there is still hope. Judges in the De Lima cases, take note, please.

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