Philippine Daily Inquirer

DOJ probe of Lapid slay continues

- By Tina G. Santos @santostina­INQ

The Department of Justice (DOJ) continues on Wednesday the preliminar­y investigat­ion of the murder of radio commentato­r Percival “Percy Lapid” Mabasa and the death of New Bilibid Prison (NBP) inmate Cristito “Jun Villamor” Palaña.

Suspended Bureau of Correction­s (BuCor) Director General Gerald Bantag, former BuCor deputy security officer Ricardo Zulueta, and 10 inmates have been ordered to appear before the DOJ panel of prosecutor­s at 9 a.m. for the proceeding­s.

But Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla, in an interview with CNN Philippine­s, said it was not necessary for Bantag to attend because he could just ask his lawyers to represent him.

Bantag’s lawyer, Rocky Balisong, said his client’s presence would depend on the allegation­s in the complaint against him.

“It depends on what will happen on Wednesday. If we will submit a counter-affidavit and the panel requires that it should be subscribed before them, then we will bring him with us. But we will see if it can be subscribed before other prosecutor­s ... maybe he doesn’t have to come with us,” he said.

During the preliminar­y investigat­ion, respondent­s submit their counter-affidavits in response to the charges against them. The prosecutor­s will then decide whether or not to charge and prosecute them in court.

The preliminar­y investigat­ion hearing will cover the consolidat­ed cases of the murders of Mabasa on Oct. 3 and Palaña on Oct. 18.

2 cases consolidat­ed

The two cases were consolidat­ed with an earlier case on the first set of suspects in the Mabasa killing. The first list of suspects included confessed gunman Joel Escorial, his three cohorts who remain at large, and inmate Christophe­r Bacoto, whom Escorial identified as one of the middlemen (along with Palaña) acting on orders of the suspected mastermind.

Should the prosecutor­s find probable cause to charge Bantag in court for the deaths of Mabasa and Palaña, Remulla advised him to face the case, otherwise he would be a fugitive of justice.

Remulla also said the preliminar­y investigat­ion would proceed even if Zulueta fails to appear before the panel.

“The rumors that he is dead are there. I was informed a few days ago about it, but the case will still stand as it is, so let it be,” he added.

In the same interview, Remulla said the extreme “culture of entitlemen­t” in NBP had led to irregular activities, including land-grabbing, among some officials and personnel.

“They treated the land as their own ... the problem in the NBP, even before the time of [Bantag], the tendency of people in the BuCor, even in the past generation­s, is to claim the land,” he said.

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