Philippine Daily Inquirer

ONE OF 2 MABASA SLAY SUSPECTS MISSING

- By Tina G. Santos @santostina­INQ

Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla has asked the National Bureau of Investigat­ion to reach out to the family of Bureau of Correction­s (BuCor) Deputy Security Officer Ricardo Zulueta, whose whereabout­s remain unknown.

“Yes, I’m asking the NBI to contact his family,” Remulla told reporters on Thursday.

Zulueta is one of the alleged mastermind­s behind the murders of radio broadcaste­r Percival “Percy Lapid” Mabasa and alleged middleman Cristito “Jun Villamor” Palaña. He supposedly relayed the kill orders for Mabasa and Villamor to gang leaders inside New Bilibid Prison.

The NBI earlier said that efforts to locate Zulueta were ongoing after he was reported absent without leave from the BuCor and in hiding from authoritie­s.

Absent at hearing

Zulueta and the other alleged mastermind, suspended BuCor Director Gen. Gerald Bantag, were no-shows during the Department of Justice’s preliminar­y investigat­ion of the murder complaints on Wednesday.

But while Bantag’s lawyer, Rocky Balisong, attended the proceeding­s on his behalf, no counsel represente­d Zulueta, according to Senior Assistant State Prosecutor Charlie Guhit, who is part of the three-member prosecutio­n panel.

Remulla believed that the error on Bantag’s middle name in the subpoena would not affect the murder complaints against the former BuCor official and several other respondent­s.

“It’s not a fatal mistake. I’m looking at the case right now... It was not a grievous error,” he said.

Guhit had expressed the same opinion on Wednesday, saying the error would not affect the case, especially because Balisong had received a new subpoena for his client on the same day.

Subpoena remedied

Balisong on Wednesday said that the subpoena he received on Monday requiring his client to attend the hearing had been addressed to a “Gerald Soriano Bantag.”

Pointing out that Bantag’s middle name was Quitaleg, the lawyer said the error was a “fatal” defect in the case as the name referred to a different individual.

Remulla also said that authoritie­s were continuing to work on the case. “Case buildup is ongoing even if the case has been filed already. You know these are not simple cases. These are very novel cases in terms of the way the case was solved and the way that the evidence came into being. That’s why the work should be nonstop,” he added.

At the same time, he said he was not keen on allowing the preliminar­y investigat­ion to be covered by the media. “The respondent­s still have privacy rights due to presumptio­n of innocence. If we do that it’s like we are condemning them already. We don’t really want to make a spectacle of that proceeding,” he explained.

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