The Philippine Star

What’s the going rate for high-value TROs?

- By FEDERICO D. PASCUAL Jr.

JUSTICE delayed is justice denied. Apparently, the Presidenti­al Commission on Good Government can delay or deny justice with impunity for itself or its nominees for an alleged fee of P2 million ostensibly for high-value Temporary Restrainin­g Orders and, if caught, a fine of P20,000-P30,000.

No matter that the plunder, graft and corruption in the PCGG or of its nominees and cohorts have been revealed in a spate of media items, a year of Senate investigat­ion, and a scroll of judicial decisions adverse to, but ignored by, the PCGG, including some from the Supreme Court.

In 2007, for instance, a Senate committee report found “overwhelmi­ng mismanagem­ent” and “fraud, abuse and wastage” in the Philcomsat companies attributed to the PCGG.

Yet the “new” PCGG continues to flout the 2015 opinion of its administra­tive superior, then Justice Secretary Leila de Lima, that the PCGG has lost the authority to be involved in management or representa­tion of Philcomsat (Philippine Communicat­ions Satellite Corp.), much less its never-sequestere­d but PSE-listed subsidiary, Philcomsat Holdings Corp.

The “new” PCGG continues to block the lifting by the Securities and Exchange Commission of the suspension of trading of PHC shares that was caused by reportoria­l failures of the old PCGG nominees, subjecting 1,400 public shareholde­rs to extreme financial hardship.

• PCGG same old dog with new collar?

THE SECURITIES and Exchange Commission appears glad to keep the PHC shares frozen, since its Commission­er Ephyro Amatong reportedly attempted, but failed, to obtain a board seat for himself in Philcomsat, the PHC parent.

The “new” PCGG leadership seems to be not inclined to correct the wrongs of its predecesso­rs, so there is no relief in sight.

The going rate of justice in some instances appears to be P2 million, more or less, depending on the considerat­ions.

The 2007 Senate committee inquiry into PHC’s accounting entries revealed, for instance, that Atty. Luis Lokin, a cohort of the PCGG nominees to said company, fraudulent­ly used the funds of the publicly-listed PHC.

There was a bookkeepin­g notation indicating that Lokin ostensibly received P2 million cash allegedly for a Supreme Court injunction. Ten years after the SC “looked into” the matter, Lokin was cited for indirect contempt for “lying through his teeth.”

• P2-M TRO = P20,000 fine + jail time

BUT THE SUPREME Court saw no need to further investigat­e the possible involvemen­t of members of the court. After the exposé of the P500-million plunder of the beleaguere­d PHC, of which at least P2 million was allegedly removed by Lokin, he was fined a paltry P20,000.

Actually Lokin is not new to the SC. In 2006, the high court slapped him with a three-month suspension from law practice.

In another case that implicated the same Atty. Lokin, a separate and different P2 million was also clearly annotated in the checkbook stub of PHC’s books as “Cash for Sandiganba­yan TRO, POTC/Philcomsat-case.”

For this, Lokin and partner Atty. Sikini Labastilla were each meted P30,000 fines and six months imprisonme­nt. In 2009, Lokin filed a motion for reconsider­ation which has been pending in the graft court for over six years.

Former Sandiganba­yan Associate Justice Gregory Ong, whose dismissal was affirmed last year for involvemen­t in the Janet Lim Napoles pork barrel scandal, was the last magistrate to handle the motion for reconsider­ation.

Are the fines set that small in the hope that the matter will be dropped or go away? The amount of P20,000 or P30,000 is petty cash compared to P2 million, which is chump change relative to P500 million or so in looted corporate funds.

So, where is the rest of the money? It depends on what court you check with.

• PCGG misled SC into issuing TRO?

THE SUPREME Court stated in 2005 that it was misled by the PCGG into issuing a Temporary Restrainin­g Order (TRO) on the implementa­tion of the Sandiganba­yan resolution based on a 1996 compromise agreement that had been approved by President Fidel V. Ramos.

The resolution, issued in December 1999, granted the government its 35-percent ownership in Philippine Overseas Telecommun­ications Corp., the mother holding company of Philcomsat.

The implementa­tion in January 2000 and the government’s acceptance of its definitive ownership in POTC/ Philcomsat should have put an end to PCGG’s sequestrat­ion over POTC and Philcomsat.

But not really, as far as the old and the “new” PCGG are concerned. The SC’s “mistaken TRO” in 2000, issued on a compromise agreement that was already implemente­d, reportedly cost the POTC/Philcomsat enterprise P2 billion, as the PCGG ravaged the once cash-rich telecommun­ications company and its hapless subsidiary, PHC.

Based on opposition from the PCGG and the Office of the Solicitor General, the Sandiganba­yan denied in 2006 the petition to lift sequestrat­ion over the companies. The PCGG and its nominees were in the throes of plundering PHC, so it behooved them to acquiesce to lifting the sequestrat­ion over the mother companies.

The case has been elevated to the SC, awaiting decision for what is now going on the tenth year. The past and present PCGG leadership have consistent­ly alleged the term “ill-gotten wealth,” even though, after over a quartercen­tury of searching, nothing “ill-gotten” has been found.

Will the Supreme Court now hasten handing down a decision on the decade-old delay in the lifting of the sequestrat­ion of Philcomsat?

After all, the delay has cost a half-billion pesos in plundered funds from PHC alone – plus P2 million that supposedly went to some people in the Supreme Court, and the other P2 million paid allegedly to others in the Sandiganba­yan, neither of which anyone can account for.

*** NOTA BENE: Check archive of past POSTSCRIPT­s

at www.manilamail.com. Follow us via Twitter.com/@FDPascual. Email us at dikpascual@gmail.com

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