The Philippine Star

Lawyer insists Poe a natural-born citizen

- – Edu Punay, Jess Diaz, Sheila Crisostomo, Paolo Romero, Christina Mendez

The camp of Sen. Grace Poe yesterday insisted she is a natural-born Filipino citizen qualified for a national elective post despite being a foundling.

George Garcia, Poe’s lawyer, invoked the principle of internatio­nal law that considers a foundling a national of the country where he or she was born.

Garcia disputed the opinion of Senior Associate Justice and Senate Electoral Tribunal (SET) chairman Antonio Carpio during the oral arguments on the

disqualifi­cation case against Poe that the senator, being a foundling, is a naturalize­d and not a naturalbor­n citizen and therefore not qualified for an electoral post unless she proves that her biological parents are Filipinos.

Garcia said the legal presumptio­n that foundlings are natural-born is the reason Poe need not go through the process of naturaliza­tion.

“There are only two types of citizens, natural-born or naturalize­d. If Senator Poe is not a foreigner who became a naturalize­d Filipino citizen, therefore she is natural-born,” Garcia said.

He added that under Philippine laws, a naturalize­d citizen would “always mean to be a former foreigner.”

In the case of Poe, Garcia said the senator did not apply for Philippine citizenshi­p.

“It is the presumptio­n of law, the Constituti­on and internatio­nal convention and treaties that made her a natural-born citizen of the country,” he said.

He said natural-born citizens are those who do not need to perform any act to acquire or perfect their citizenshi­p.

“Did Senator Poe perform any act? Did she apply for anything? Did she apply or petition that she can become a natural-born? Of course, the answer to these questions is no,” Garcia said.

Initial reaction

Garcia expressed hope Carpio’s statement does not reflect the sentiment of the entire SET.

“Perhaps, this is just an initial reaction based on an initial interpreta­tion of law. We are hoping to fully convince him (Carpio) to change his interpreta­tion of the law by showing to him that at least Sen. Grace Poe is not really a naturalize­d but a natural-born citizen,” Garcia said.

He said Poe’s legal team remains confident in the integrity and independen­ce of the SET chairman despite his “erroneous interpreta­tion of the law.”

“With all due respect, without preempting and at the same time we will not be accused of being sub judice, we honestly believe that it is an erroneous interpreta­tion because naturalize­d citizen would always mean to be a former foreigner,” Garcia said.

He said the 1987 Constituti­on, internatio­nal law and domestic laws favor protecting foundlings.

“The presumptio­n prevails unless proof to the contrary is presented. Under Rule 31 of the Rules of Court, whoever alleges must prove,” he said.

No proof

Garcia also noted that during Monday’s oral arguments, petitioner Lito David’s lawyer Manuel Luna admitted they have no evidence to prove that Poe’s parents are foreigners.

“We maintain that it is not the respondent but the petitioner who should present proof that the senator is not a natural-born Filipino because her parents were allegedly foreigners,” he added.

Garcia said it was not accurate to say that the burden of proof shifted to Poe when the petitioner has failed to prove any evidence to substantia­te his claim.

He said they have presented enough documentar­y evidence to prove Poe is a natural-born citizen, including her birth certificat­e, adoption papers, Comelec ID, an order from the Bureau of Immigratio­n granting her petition for dual citizenshi­p and that of her three children and supporting documents on her renunciati­on of American citizenshi­p.

“We are confident we have presented sufficient evidence to warrant the dismissal of the petition,” Garcia said.

Under the 1987 Constituti­on, only natural-born Filipino citizens are qualified to run for president, vice president, senator and congressma­n.

Inhibit from Poe’s case

As this developed, Carpio was urged yesterday to inhibit from the case of Poe.

“He should inhibit himself out of decency because his umbilical cord is still tied to Nonong (Avelino) Cruz, who is the lawyer of (Liberal Party standardbe­arer) Mar Roxas,” Rep. Silvestre Bello lll of party-list group 1-BAP told a news conference.

“His vote on the case of Sen. Grace in the Senate Electoral Tribunal will be suspect,” Bello, who has expressed his support for Poe, said.

Carpio and Cruz are former partners in a law office whose clients included detained former President and now Pampanga Rep. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and her husband.

Arroyo appointed Carpio to the SC in 2001. Cruz, on the other hand, was Arroyo’s defense secretary.

Reminded that Carpio has long severed his ties with his former law office and he and Roxas are not parties in Poe’s SET case, Bello said, “Justice Carpio cannot deny his connection to the law firm of Nonong Cruz.”

Asked if his appeal is also addressed to Sen. Vicente Sotto lll, a member of the Nationalis­t People’s Coalition ( NPC) and a Poe supporter who sits in the SET, the partylist lawmaker said it was not.

“The senators sitting in the tribunal represent political parties, unlike the three justices in the SET who are expected to be impartial,” Bello said.

The other senator-members of the tribunal are Loren Legarda, Nancy Binay, Pia Cayetano, Cynthia Villar and Paolo Benigno Aquino IV.

Like Sotto, Legarda is a member of NPC, while Cayetano and Villar belong to the Nacionalis­ta Party. Aquino is part of the ruling Liberal Party.

The other two justices in the tribunal are Arturo Brion and Teresita de Castro.

Objective

But leaders of the House of Representa­tives opposed calls for Carpio to inhibit.

Speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr. said he knows Carpio to be fair and objective despite his past connection­s in the private legal practice.

“I know and trust Justice Carpio as a man of intelligen­ce,” Belmonte said.

Deputy Speaker and Isabela Rep. Giorgidi Aggabao said he considers Carpio as one of the best SC magistrate­s.

He, however, said he was puzzled by the turn of events in the SET where the burden of proving her citizenshi­p was apparently transferre­d to Poe from David.

Leyte Rep. Ferdinand Martin Romualdez, leader of the independen­t bloc, said Carpio’s statement “is just one of the diverse opinions in the SET.”

SC to decide

Senate President Franklin Drilon said the question on Poe’s citizenshi­p is a legal issue that only the SC can resolve with finality.

“It is very crucial for the SET to be able to come up with a decision at the earliest time possible, in order to give the high court sufficient time to hear the case and render a verdict before the election period kicks off,” Drilon said.

He noted only four out of the nine members of the SET are lawyers, referring to De Castro, Carpio, Brion and Cayetano.

“The matter that is before the tribunal involves the interpreta­tion and applicatio­n of the provisions of the Constituti­on, RA 9225, commonly known as the Dual Citizenshi­p Act, and other pertinent laws concerning citizenshi­p on an undisputed set of facts,” he said.

He expressed hope the SET would act on the case with urgency, considerin­g the scheduled filing of the certificat­e of candidacy by October, and the printing of official ballots by January 2015.

Disadvanta­geous

Election lawyer Romulo Macalintal said Carpio’s “theory” is disadvanta­geous to other foundlings.

“Thousands of birth records of foundlings or those children under the care of government­al agencies who were abandoned by their parents have to be corrected to reflect their status as ‘ naturalize­d Filipinos’,” Macalintal said in a statement.

“The irony of it is that the Constituti­on says they (foundlings) should have more in law as they have less in life and yet interprete­rs of the laws want to deprive them of such lawful right,” he said.

Meanwhile, Sen. Francis Escudero challenged David to prove that Poe is not a Filipino.

“He who alleges must prove the same. Does attorney David have evidence to show that Grace is not a Filipino? If David says Grace is not a Filipino, he should prove that Grace is a foreigner,” Escudero said.

“Based on the laws, a foundling is a presumed citizen of the country where he or she was found. That presumptio­n has not been overtaken,” he added.

Escudero also expressed belief that Poe’s decision to undergo DNA match would also bolster their defense that Poe is a natural-born Filipino.

“The DNA testing will simply be confirmato­ry. The fact remains that she is a citizen. And because she did not perform any act through an act Congress or a degree of the court, she is natural-born and not naturalize­d,” he said.

Grinning ear-to-ear

Aggabao, NPC president, said many party members are “grinning ear-to-ear” over the latest results of the Social Weather Stations survey showing Poe remained as the most preferred candidate for president and vice president.

“It was effortless for her to be No. 1,” Aggabao said, noting the poll was taken before Poe announced she is running for president.

Camarines Sur Rep. Rolando Andaya Jr. said the citizenshi­p issue raised against Poe would be to her advantage.

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