The Philippine Star

Ethics and search for truth

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The televised impeachmen­t trial of Chief Justice Corona is a novelty in TV amusement series. This human drama drowns all telenovela­s because it is telecast live. It is educationa­l in many ways: portraying the many aspects of bank accounts, security of deposits and bank investment­s, statement of assets and liabilitie­s and networth (SALN) and impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

How lawyers perform profession­ally seems that they may not work together in harmony because to a non-lawyer, it appears that for every case discussed by 100 lawyers there are 101 opinions. In the search for truth and justice, a lawyer may not confine his arguments to protecting the rights of his client but may even attempt to hide the guilt through a mantle of technicali­ties. Isn’t there a code of ethics for lawyers where in the art of litigation all arguments should be directed to the search for truth and justice?

At the onset of the Senate hearings Senate president Ponce Enrile, the presiding officer, emphasized in his preamble that the Constituti­on specifical­ly relegated the function to impeach a high government official to the Senate, and that the trial will not be conducted in a manner similar to court hearings where contending parties will use legal technicali­ties in the process but instead will employ only means to arrive at a political conclusion. Yet in the Senate hearings, the defense counsel had all the latitudes to block the presentati­on of evidence by the prosecutio­n using technicali­ties. Black and white evidence allegedly extracted illegally was disqualifi­ed. Isn’t evidence per se evidence? Even if there is irregulari­ty in the procuremen­t isn’t the credibilit­y of cold evidence valued as truth neverthe- less, then the guilt of the presentor should be penalized for the misdemeano­r?

Isn’t the prosecutio­n panel (congressme­n) at a big disadvanta­ge when matched in the process, with ex-associate Justice Cuevas and a host of “campanilla lawyers,” it was like puny David in a battle with giant Goliath?

In the presentati­on of manifestat­ions can speech and body language be tempered to low volume? Although aggressive terminolog­y and behavior may be excusable for the sake of emphasis and natural dispositio­n, can’t protagonis­ts emulate the late Sir Winston Churchill in his pronouncem­ent that “Even if you have to kill a man, it costs no more to be polite.” — Dr.

SANTIAGO A. DEL ROSARIO, Commission­er, PMA legislatio­n, former PMA president

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