The Philippine Star

Lozada gets 10 years for graft

- By RHODINA VILLANUEVA

ZTE whistle-blower Rodolfo Lozada Jr. is escorted by Sr. Mary John Mananzan at the Sandiganba­yan yesterday, where he was sentenced to 10 years for graft in connection with a forestry deal.

The Sandiganba­yan yesterday sentenced whistle-blower Rodolfo Noel “Jun” Lozada Jr. to 10 years for graft for granting separate leasehold rights over public lands to his brother and a private company when he headed a government forestry agency.

Lozada said he would appeal the verdict by filing a motion for reconsider­ation.

The anti- graft court’s Fourth Division also found his brother Jose Orlando Lozada guilty and sentenced them to 10 years in prison.

The court also imposed on Jun Lozada the penalty of perpetual disqualifi­cation from holding public office.

“I’m not allowed to speak concerning the merits of the case. But what I can say is that this has been a continuing agony for me from the time I spoke on the NBN- ZTE deal,” Lozada said.

“I was just trying to do my job here, but what happens, is that the big fish are the ones who are being acquitted,” he said.

Lozada added the decision “will put to light the state of our judiciary.”

“The people themselves can weigh what is really true here in everything’s that happening,” he said.

In a 27-page decision penned by Associate Justice Geraldine Faith Ong, the cour t sustained the findings of the Office of the Ombudsman accusing Jun Lozada of conflict of interest when he granted a six-hectare leasehold right to his brother Jose Orlando on Dec. 18, 2009.

Jun Lozada was president and chief executive officer of Philippine Forest Corp. (PFC), a stateowned corporatio­n under the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources, tasked to award leasehold rights to qualified beneficiar­ies.

While in the performanc­e of his official function, he caused the award of a leasehold right over a public land under the “Lupang Hinirang” program of the PFC to Transforma Quinta Inc., a private corporatio­n in which he has a direct or indirect financial or pecuniary interest.

Lozada was appointed in conjunctio­n with his wife, Ma. Violeta Lozada, by Transforma Quinta Inc. via board resolution to act on its behalf on certain financial transactio­ns, “when as president it is his duty to award leasehold rights only to qualified beneficiar­ies,” the court said.

“The prosecutio­n was able to satisfacto­rily prove that accused Jose Orlando, a consultant of PFC, was issued a Notice of Award despite the fact that he did not participat­e in the procedure for the pre-qualificat­ion, auction and award as laid out in the Terms of Reference.”

The Sandiganba­yan s a id the privilege could not be extended to Jose Orlando since he is not qualified under the resolution of the PFC. “He should have applied and undergone the regular process under the Family Farm Package,” the court added.

Jun Lozada, however, was acquitted over charges of violation of Section 3(h) of Republic Act 3019, “having direct or indirect financing or pecuniary interest in any business, contract or transactio­n in connection with which he intervenes or takes part in his official capacity.”

“The fact of financial or pecuniary interest of Lozada in the transactio­n or in Transforma Quinta Inc. was not clearly establishe­d by the prosecutio­n,” the court said.

“Whether accused Lozada encouraged the corporatio­n to in- vest in agricultur­e is vague and ambivalent. He simply brought to the corporatio­n the idea of investing in agricultur­e given its primary purpose. It could not be concluded that Lozada encouraged the corporatio­n to apply for a leasehold right under the Lupang Hinirang project,” the decision read.

The Office of the Ombudsman affirmed its decision to file graft charges against Lozada when it denied his motion for reconsider­ation.

Lozada pleaded not guilty to the charges before the Sandiganba­yan in October 2012 during a conditiona­l arraignmen­t for the purpose of allowing him to travel abroad.

Lozada was the whistleblo­wer in the multi-millionpes­o broadband deal with the Chinese telecommun­ications firm ZTE involving former president and now Pampanga Rep. Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and former Commission on Elections chairman Benjamin Abalos Sr.

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