The Philippine Star

Napoles brod key to PDAF probe – DOJ

- By EDU PUNAY

Whatever happened to the brother of jailed pork barrel queen Janet LimNapoles?

Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II has ordered the National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI) to trace the whereabout­s of Reynald “Jojo” Lim. Aguirre believes Lim is the key to

the reinvestig­ation on the multibilli­on-peso Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund (PDAF) anomaly.

“I think it’s not just the NBI that should find him, but also the PNP (Philippine National Police). He could be a big piece in the puzzle that we will solve,” he said.

Aguirre said he has received informatio­n that a certain group holding Jojo Lim was blackmaili­ng Napoles.

“Based on the informatio­n – still raw – the brother was held to prevent Mrs. Napoles from tagging several personalit­ies in the PDAF scam during the investigat­ion in the previous administra­tion,” he said.

Aguirre said it appeared Lim was used to “blackmail” Napoles in the selective prosecutio­n of lawmakers and officials who benefited from the PDAF anomaly.

Asked whom he was referring to, the DOJ chief replied: “You all know which group it is.”

Aguirre vowed to name the group once the NBI has gathered evidence to support the informatio­n.

Sources, however, hinted Lim was held by a political party and was even made to contribute millions during the campaign in last year’s general elections.

The source revealed Napoles continues to receive death threats while in prison at the Correction­al Institute for Women (CIW).

The threats turned worse following reports that she is being considered as a government witness.

Aguirre explained this is precisely the reason he supports the plea of Napoles to be transferre­d to a more secure detention facility such as the NBI main office.

He believed that once the threat to her brother has been resolved and Napoles has been secured, that’s the only time she could fully spill the beans on the PDAF scam.

Lim was a co-accused of Napoles in the serious illegal detention case filed by whistleblo­wer Benhur Luy, where the businesswo­man was acquitted recently by the Court of Appeals.

Lim, however, turned fugitive and authoritie­s have yet to determine his whereabout­s.

Meanwhile, Aguirre gave assurance that the reinvestig­ation on the PDAF scam would not be as “selective.”

He said the investigat­ion would not target specific personalit­ies or a particular political party.

“Napoles will be used only against those guilty whether you are in the opposition or administra­tion. If evidence will show you are responsibl­e, you should clear your name or prepare for trial,” Aguirre said.

“We are going to conduct investigat­ion without being influenced by anybody,” he stressed.

According to Aguirre, the President has not discussed the matter with him.

Last week, Aguirre announced the conduct of a reinvestig­ation on the pork barrel scam and the possibilit­y of Napoles being used as state witness.

He has met with Napoles’ lawyer Stephen David and former Manila councilor Greco Belgica, an anti-pork barrel advocate who petitioned the Supreme Court to stop the PDAF during the previous administra­tion.

Aguirre said there was “selective justice” and “miscarriag­e of justice” in the investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of lawmakers in the PDAF scam.

He pointed out only three senators and a few congressme­n were indicted in the Sandiganba­yan when Napoles had tagged about a dozen senators and over 100 congressme­n.

Aguirre, however, assured the public that the reinvestig­ation would not affect the ongoing trial in the Sandiganba­yan of former senators Juan Ponce Enrile, Ramon Revilla Jr. and Jinggoy Estrada who are co-accused of Napoles in the plunder cases stemming from the pork barrel scam.

The Sandiganba­yan, meanwhile, has dismissed the motion of reconsider­ation filed by co-accused Jessica “Gigi” Reyes to drop the plunder case against her, saying her pleading lacks merit.

The court affirmed its January decision to junk her motion for reconsider­ation seeking a reversal of the original ruling that denied her pleading.

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