The Philippine Star

Ducut posts bail for pork barrel scam cases

- By MICHAEL PUNONGBAYA­N

Former Energy Regulatory Commission chairperso­n Ze- naida Ducut posted P140,000 bail before the Sandiganba­yan yesterday morning for charges in connection with the pork barrel scam.

Ducut appeared before the anti- graft court’s Third Division to shell out P60,000 for two graft cases and P80,000 more for two malversati­on of public funds charges.

She underwent the usual booking procedure that includes submitting photograph­s, filling up a personal data sheet and submitting fingerprin­t samples.

Ducut refused to grant media interviews and left the Sandiganba­yan building with her lawyer immediatel­y after posting bail.

The Office of the Ombudsman filed criminal complaints against Ducut and former Davao del Sur first District representa­tive Marc Douglas Cagas IV last week.

Investigat­ion showed that Ducut and Cagas played a role in the pork barrel scam allegedly mastermind­ed by businesswo­man Janet LimNapoles, who was also named a respondent in the cases along with a number of other individual­s.

The Office of the Ombudsman ordered the filing of criminal charges against Cagas, former representa­tive Rozzano Rufino Biazon and several other lawmakers last month.

Ducut was indicted for allegedly acting as a bagwoman for the legislator­s who received kickbacks or commission­s from bogus non-government organizati­ons ( NGOs) controlled by Napoles that implemente­d fictitious projects.

Cagas was accused of misusing P11 million in pork barrel funds from 2007 to 2009 for which he allegedly received total commission­s, rebates and kickbacks amounting to at least P5.5 million.

He had insisted that he could not have misappropr­iated or consented to the misappropr­iation of his Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund (PDAF) because he neither had control of nor was accountabl­e for the funds.

Cagas claimed that the appointmen­t of the implementi­ng organizati­ons, disburseme­nt and utilizatio­n of his PDAF are not within his offi functions as a lawmaker.

Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales, however, rejected his defense, noting that his “contention­s fail to persuade” as “the sworn statements of witnesses, disburseme­nt vouchers, indorsed/encashed checks, MOAs with NGOs, written requests, liquidatio­n reports and other evidence on record indubitabl­y indicate that respondent­s conspired with one another to repeatedly raid the public treasury.”

ER posts bail

Less than 24 hours after the Sandiganba­yan ordered his arrest, former Laguna governor Jorge “ER” Ejercito appeared before the anti- graft court yesterday to post bail for the second time.

He paid another P30,000 and underwent another booking procedure since his first bail, paid before Sta. Cruz, Laguna Regional Trial Court executive judge Cynthia Marno-Ricablanca last March 21, was confiscate­d.

Ejercito failed to appear before the Sandiganba­yan for the arraignmen­t of his graft case last Monday, prompting magistrate­s of the Fourth Division to order his arrest.

His lawyers, during the Monday hearing, failed to convince the anti-graft court that Ejercito could not make it to the arraignmen­t due to his confinemen­t at the Cardinal Santos Medical Center in San Juan after he contracted pneumonia.

The Sandiganba­yan is yet to schedule another arraignmen­t date for Ejercito, who is accused of involvemen­t in an insurance deal anomaly in 2008.

Ejercito refused to speak to the media but in an earlier statement sent to The STAR, he claimed that the Office of the Ombudsman had filed a baseless graft case against him that was actually junked by the anti-graft agency’s probers in 2011.

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