The Freeman

Trillanes: Faeldon knows Duterte family’s ‛dark secrets’

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MANILA — President Ro drigo Duterte's ap pointment of former Customs Commission­er Ni canor Faeldon to an office at the Department of National Defense showed that the former military man was a "sacred cow" because he knew the "dark secrets" of the chief executive's family, an opposition senator said on Wednesday.

Senator Antonio Trillanes IV said this knowledge made the president overlook the "gross incompeten­ce" of the former Customs chief who was tagged in a controvers­y involving the entry of P6.4 billion into the country in May.

"Faeldon knows the dark secrets of the Duterte family that's why even if he is grossly incompeten­t he remains a sacred cow," Trillanes said in reaction to the appointmen­t of his former Magdalo comrade.

Senator Panfilo Lacson, who accused Faeldon of receiving millions of pesos in welcome gift when he assumed his Customs post last year, said that his appointmen­t did not ne cessarily mean that the Senate would lift its co ntempt citation and release him.

He said it was Duterte's pr erogative to appoint individual­s to key posts in the government and the Senate could not interfere in this power.

L acson, however, stressed that the Senate could also not be forced to release Faeldon who wa s detained by the upper chamber following his resistance to answer questions about the multibilli­on peso drug shipment that went under his nose.

H e said Faeldon might have to fulfill his responsibi­lities at the Office of Civil Defense from his Senate detention cell.

"Faeldon has not been convicted of any crime yet, and certainly he is not barred from assuming an appointive or even an elective position," Lacson said in a separate statement.

" So, while he can assume his new post at the OCD, he may have to function from the Senate detention facility via remote control, unless his contempt citation is lifted by the Senate acting as a collegial body," the former police chief added.

D uterte assigned Fa eldon as a deputy administra­tor at the Office of Civil Defense based on the appointmen­t letter dated December 22 released by the Palace.

Despite the buffeting cr iticisms of Faeldon's handling of the illegal drugs shipment, the president ha d always reiterated his support for his first Customs chief and stressed that the government needs him.

The Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency has filed a case against Faeldon and a host of other Customs officials for their complicity in the importatio­n of illegal drugs into the country.

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