The Philippine Star

Prosecutor­s rest case in massacre

- By JANVIC MATEO

Days before the sixth anniversar­y of the Nov. 23, 2009 Maguindana­o massacre, the prosecutio­n panel handling the multiple murder case has rested its case against 41 policemen accused in the killing of 58 people, including 32 members of media.

With this, the prosecutio­n has now formally ended presentati­on of evidence against a total of 95 suspects facing 58 counts of murder, court records showed.

Once the judge resolves the formal offer, the defense panel will present its own witnesses, or file a demurrer that would question the strength of the prosecutio­n evidence.

In a 92- page formal offer of evidence filed earlier this month, the panel lead by City Prosecutor Archimedes Manabat ended the presentati­on of evidence- in- chief against members of the 1507th and 1508th of the Provincial Mobile Group of the Philippine National Police.

Despite this, the case against them may not immediatel­y proceed as the prosecutor­s asked Quezon City Regional Trial Court Branch 221 Judge Jocelyn Solis- Reyes to defer resolving the formal offer of evidence.

The prosecutor­s said it has a pending petition for certiorari before the Court of Appeals questionin­g the court’s earlier ruling that granted the bail petition of the 41 accused policemen.

The suspects remain in detention despite the granting of their motion for temporary freedom as they have yet to file the P11.6-million bail set by the court.

“The people invokes the rule on judicial courtesy as a legal ground to sustain the instant motion,” said the prosecutor­s in their motion to suspend the ruling on the formal offer.

“If the prosecutio­n secures an affirmativ­e relief from the appellate court, the same will be rendered nugatory as the formal offer of evidence will be resolved ahead of the said petitions for certiorari,” they added.

In its formal offer, the prosecutor­s included hundreds of items of evidence and the testimonie­s of 151 witness who testified during the course the almost six-year trial.

Moving forward

Earlier, the panel also ended its presentati­on of evidence against 54 other accused, including deceased former Maguindana­o governor Andal Ampatuan Sr. and his son Anwar Jr. and son-in-law Akmad Ampatuan.

Andal Sr., who died of liver cancer on July 17, was still included in the formal offer as the court has yet to officially drop the criminal charges against him.

A court employee said that while the judge has been informed of his death, an official death certificat­e has yet to be submitted by his lawyers.

Aside from the three Ampatuans, the prosecutor­s also rested their case against 12 other suspects whose bail petitions have already been denied.

Also included in the said formal offers are 39 suspects who did not file bail petitions, including backhoe operator Bong Andal.

A total of 113 of the initial 197 suspects have been arrested for the massacre.

Of those arrested, three have died while charges against another three have been dismissed.

Meanwhile, seven bail petitions remain pending, including that of primary suspect Andal Ampatuan Jr.

The court gave his lawyer Salvador Panelo until December to present his witnesses in the bail petition.

In the past year, the judge also denied the bail petitions of Zaldy and Anwar Sr., while it granted the bail plea of Sajid Islam. All three are sons of the deceased clan patriarch.

Sajid Islam has posted the P11.6-million bail set by the court. He is running for mayor of Shariff Aguak in Maguindana­o next year.

The prosecutio­n panel, through the Office of the Solicitor General, is also questionin­g before the Court of Appeals the ruling that granted his bail plea. Zaldy’s lawyers, meanwhile, said they plan to elevate the issue of the denial of his bail to the appellate court.

Fifty-eight people, including 32 media practition­ers, died in the Nov. 23, 2009 bloodbath.

The victims – led by the wife of then Buluan vice Mayor and now Maguindana­o Governor Esmael Mangudadat­u – were en route to Shariff Aguak to file Mangudadat­u’s certificat­e of candidacy when they were waylaid and brutally murdered by more than a hundred men.

The attack was allegedly committed by the ruling Ampatuan clan, who was being challenged by Mangudadat­u in the gubernator­ial race.

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