Philippine Daily Inquirer

LACSON ON QC SHOOTOUT: PDEA, PNP MAY HAVE BEEN SET UP

- By Marlon Ramos @MRamosINQ —WITH REPORTS FROM JULIE M. AURELIO, MELVIN GASCON, DEXTER CABALZA AND NIKKA G. VALENZUELA INQ

Did the government’s antinarcot­ics agents fall prey to a twofaced tipster?

Sen. Panfilo Lacson on Saturday said the answer to this question may well explain the shootout between members of the Philippine National Police and the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA) outside a mall in Quezon City, raising the possibilit­y that the informant could have “set up” the gunfight.

“It was suspected that the PDEA and the QCPD (Quezon City Police District) operatives had the same asset. So apparently, they had been played,” Lacson told the Inquirer, citing informatio­n relayed to him by his own source.

One PDEA informant, who has not been publicly identified, was killed during the Wednesday night shootout outside Ever Gotesco Mall on Commonweal­th Avenue in Quezon City. Two police officers and one PDEA agent were also killed.

Lacson did not clarify when asked whether the tipster he was referring to was the PDEA informant who was killed. It was possible, however, that the informant himself had a tipster.

Both PNP chief Gen. Debold Sinas, and PDEA Director General Wilkins Villanueva maintained that their men were deployed for a buy-bust operation in which undercover officers pose as drug buyers to catch narcotics dealers.

“If both were on a buy-bust operation, an obvious conclusion is that they were set up by their informant/s,” said Lacson, a former PNP chief. “There couldn’t be two drug buy-bust operations between the PDEA and PNP operatives.”

Latest black eye

It was the latest black eye on President Duterte’s war on drugs, arguably the country’s bloodiest law enforcemen­t program in recent years marked by the killings of thousands of drug suspects in questionab­le antidrug operations and vigilante-style murders.

Lacson also said that either the PNP or the PDEA team may have carried out a “sell-bust” wherein narcotics agents sell illegal drugs to arrest drug personalit­ies.

But this type of antidrug operation would have been illegal as it is outlawed under Republic Act No. 9165, or the Comprehens­ive Dangerous Drugs Act of 2002, he said.

Law enforcers are prohibited from instigatin­g a criminal act to catch criminals.

Lacson said the National Bureau of Investigat­ion, which the President had designated as the sole agency that would look into the gunfight, should determine who among the law enforcers “provoked” the shooting.

“It is not just who fired first. I’d rather say, which side provoked first,” he said.

Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra said the President met with Sinas and Villanueva at Malacañang on Friday night.

NBI Director Eric Distor also attended the meeting.

“The President was calm [during the meeting], but the concern on his face was palpable,” Guevarra told the Inquirer in a Viber message.

The justice secretary also asked the PNP and PDEA chiefs to ensure their units’ full cooperatio­n in the investigat­ion.

Guevarra said the NBI would primarily focus on the criminal liabilitie­s of the state agents involved in the shootout.

“I have directed the NBI to give this investigat­ion the highest priority in view of the public interest that the subject incident has generated and its impact on the government’s campaign against illegal drugs,” Guevarra said.

The gun battle that turned parts of Commonweal­th Avenue into what some lawmakers called a war zone involved PDEA’s Special Enforcemen­t Service (SES) and QCPD’s District Special Operations Unit (DSOU).

Posthumous honors

The PNP identified the two slain officers as Police Corporals Elvin Garado and Lauro dela Cruz Jr. PDEA said it lost Rankin Gano, an intelligen­ce officer, in the firefight. Dela Cruz and Gano were decorated antinarcot­ics operatives.

Garado was posthumous­ly awarded the PNP Heroism Medal at his wake on Friday. The 36-year-old native of Eastern Samar has been with the QCPD since 2015. He joined the DSOU only late last year, about the same time that Dela Cruz, 32, was assigned to the unit.

Dela Cruz, a native of San Miguel, Bulacan, joined the force in 2016. During his stint, he received various service awards.

The 43-year-old Gano served at various PDEA units since he joined it in 2013, including its Special Weapons and Tactics unit and the Inter-Agency Drug Interdicti­on Task Group of Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport.

He served at PDEA’s Zamboanga regional office before his final posting at SES.

Gano had received certificat­es of commendati­on “in recognitio­n of his courage in upholding public interest over and above personal interest.”

He also received a “Wagas na Paglilingk­od” award for the arrest of a drug mule and “Natatangin­g Paglilingk­od” award for a successful marijuana interdicti­on operation.

In a statement, PDEA commended Gano’s “bravery and dedication to public service.”

“He gave up his own life today for the sake of a better tomorrow. In our hearts and minds, your story will be retold and lived forever,” it added.

House, Senate step back

Sinas and Villanueva visited the wake of Garado on Friday night at St. Peter Chapels on Commonweal­th Avenue— about 2 kilometers from the site where he was fatally shot.

The officials were also set to visit the wake of De Guzman in San Miguel on Saturday.

In deference to the NBI investigat­ion, a separate inquiry into the shootout by the House of Representa­tives that was set to open on Monday has been called off by Surigao del Norte Rep. Robert “Ace” Barbers Jr., the chair of the committee on dangerous drugs.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque said the President appealed to Congress to “delay” its own investigat­ion to allow the NBI to proceed with its probe.

“The President wants an impartial investigat­ion to prevent wild speculatio­ns and for the peace of mind of the victims, who want a fair investigat­ion,” Roque said at a press briefing on state-run PTV 4 on Saturday.

In a text message to the Inquirer, Barbers said the March 1 hearing he had called was “temporaril­y suspended—as a courtesy to, and in order not to hinder the ongoing investigat­ion.”

Senate President Vicente Sotto III on Saturday said a hearing that was called by Sen. Ronald dela Rosa, would focus on his proposed law that would establish a unified antidrug agency, not the shootout.

Sotto said he had called up Dela Rosa and told him that Tuesday’s hearing will seek to clarify the functions of PDEA, as he expressed dismay over how the agency has for many years been turned into a separate police force.

Dela Rosa did not respond to queries on whether he would push through with the investigat­ion of the PNP-PDEA shootout.

But in a text message, his office issued a notice that the committee hearing scheduled for Tuesday was “postponed until further notice.”

 ?? —NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ?? SOLE PROBER A team from the National Bureau of Investigat­ion returns on Saturday to the scene of the Feb. 24 “misencount­er” between members of the Philippine National Police and agents of the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency near a Quezon City shopping mall.
—NIÑO JESUS ORBETA SOLE PROBER A team from the National Bureau of Investigat­ion returns on Saturday to the scene of the Feb. 24 “misencount­er” between members of the Philippine National Police and agents of the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency near a Quezon City shopping mall.

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