The Philippine Star

J e c s i ion l ss cre ri l es

- Janvic Mateo

The judge handling the 2009 Maguindana­o massacre trial has declined another request from the defense panel to set additional trial dates to expedite the dispositio­n of the multiple murder case.

In a three-page order, Quezon City Regional Trial Court Branch 221 Judge Jocelyn Solis-Reyes said the recent developmen­ts in the court proceeding­s show there is no immediate need to set Mondays as additional hearing dates.

“It won’t take long now for the prosecutio­n to terminate the presentati­on of its witnesses, both in the bail hearing and evidence-in-chief, after they filed their formal offer of evidence in opposition to the bail petitions of 12 suspects last April,” the judge said.

She noted the prosecutio­n’s manifestat­ion to dispense the testimonie­s of some of their witnesses, as well as the withdrawal of the defense objection to the presentati­on of suspects Rex Ariel Diongon and Esmael Kanapia.

Solis-Reyes said that setting additional trial dates on Monday will pose no problem should a need arise during the presentati­on defense evidence in bail hearing or the trial proper.

“After all, Mondays are likewise being utilized for other incidents such as hearing of motions filed relative to these cases,” read the order.

Court hearings are currently held at a makeshift court at the Quezon City JailAnnex in Camp Bagong Diwa, Taguig City every Wednesdays and Thursdays. Most suspects are detained at the said facility.

In the motion asking for additional trial dates, some defense lawyers said the court must schedule additional trial dates in “the greater interest of justice for the accused who had been languishin­g in jail for over three years.”

The defense said that in “under any standard, over three years of bail hearings is way, way too long.”

In opposing the motion, the prosecutio­n panel said the delays in the proceeding­s were not because of their refusal to set additional trial dates but due to the defense counsels’ refusal to allow the presentati­on of some witnesses, including Diongon and Kanapia.

The prosecutio­n also noted that additional trial dates would be “humanly impossible” as they are also handling other cases aside from the Maguindana­o massacre.

Last week, Solis-Reyes dismissed the motion of former Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao governor Zaldy Ampatuan to schedule separate court proceeding­s for his case.

She said it would be “more apt that the proceeding­s of the case against all accused be jointly tried.”

A total of 197 suspects were initially charged for the Nov. 23, 2009 massacre, which claimed the lives of 58 people, including 32 media practition­ers.

The media were supposed to cover the filing of the certificat­e of candidacy of then-Buluan vice mayor and now Maguindana­o Gov. Esmael Mangudadat­u. Their convoy, which was led by Mangudadat­u’s wife, was stopped and killed by more than 100 armed men.

Members of the Ampatuan clan, who were tagged as mastermind­s of the massacre, denied involvemen­t in the incident.

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