The Philippine Star

Jinggoy wants to scrutinize AMLC report

- Elizabeth Marcelo

The camp of former senator Jinggoy Estrada is seeking to debunk allegation­s he pocketed government funds by questionin­g a report by the Anti-Money Laundering Council ( AMLC) on several government officials allegedly involved in the multibilli­onpeso “pork” scam.

In a motion dated Nov. 29 filed before the Sandiganba­yan’s Fifth Division, lawyer Paul Mar Arias specifical­ly asked for the issuance of subpoena on the AMLC’s inquiry report on the “bank and other financial transactio­ns” made by businesswo­man Janet Lim-Napoles, the alleged mastermind of the scam, from 2004 to 2012.

Estrada’s camp also asked the court to subpoena any “suspicious transactio­n reports and covered transactio­n reports” submitted by banks, non-bank financial institutio­ns, covered institutio­ns or any other government agencies concerning Napoles’ financial transactio­ns from 2004 to 2012.

Estrada is facing plunder and graft charges before the Fifth Division over the alleged misuse of his Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund (PDAF) or pork barrel during his term as a senator.

Based on the informatio­n of the cases filed by the Office of the Ombudsman in June 2014, Estrada amassed a total of P183.79 million worth of kickbacks for allocating his PDAF from 2004 to 2012 to the fake non- government organizati­ons (NGOs) allegedly owned by Napoles.

The PDAF allocation was for the supposed implementa­tion of his livelihood projects, which the ombudsman said were never realized.

Estrada had repeatedly denied having any transactio­n with Napoles concerning his PDAF.

At the height of the pork scam issue, a photo of Napoles posing with Estrada and then fellow senator Ramon “Bong” Revilla Jr. at a party surfaced, but Estrada was quick to say that it was purely a one-time social acquaintan­ce.

Estrada and Napoles remain in detention after the Fifth Division early this year denied with finality their respective petitions to post bail, which the court heard for almost two years.

The Fifth Division set the pretrial of the plunder case on Jan. 30, 2017 wherein the prosecutio­n and the defense are expected to submit their final list of witnesses and evidence to be presented during the trial proper.

The AMLC report on the PDAF scam is considered among the strongest pieces of evidence presented by the prosecutio­n against Estrada during the bail proceeding­s.

In its 90-page inquiry report on Estrada’s financial and bank transactio­ns, the AMLC said there were indication­s that the former senator received a total of P157.6 million in kickbacks from Napoles from 2007 to 2012.

The AMLC said there were also “indication­s of money laundering” in the transactio­ns of Estrada’s nine bank accounts. The report said Estrada’s alleged kickbacks from the pork scam were first deposited by the Napoles-linked foundation­s to dummy accounts under the names Francis Yenko and Juan Ng before the funds were transferre­d to the real accounts of the former senator.

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