The Philippine Star

Faeldon: No favors sought by Rody son-in-law.

- By JESS DIAZ

Resigned Customs commission­er Nicanor Faeldon yesterday confirmed meeting with President Duterte’s son-in-law Manases Carpio at his Port Area office in Manila.

“I met with Mans (Carpio), who is my brother in the fraternity, only once, not five times (as alleged by opposition Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV),” Faeldon told ANC.

Carpio is the husband of Duterte’s daughter Sara, the mayor of Davao City.

Trillanes claimed that Davao City Vice Mayor and presidenti­al son Paolo Duterte as well as Carpio are behind the Davao group that peddles influence and facilitate­s the release of shipments at Customs for a fee.

Their names came up after importer-broker Mark Taguba alleged that he has turned over millions, including a P5-million enrollment fee, to persons claiming to represent Paolo and Carpio, but insisted that he has never met the two.

Faeldon said Carpio met with him about his client’s problem with an area in the Customs zone where he had a contract and where shipments were supposed to be examined.

“This was discontinu­ed by one of my predecesso­rs. Since they informed me that the case was already in court, I told them I could not do anything about it. Manse didn’t ask for any favor,” he said.

The President has defended Carpio’s meeting with Faeldon and other officials, saying there was nothing irregular about them.

“I do not apologize for him because he’s a lawyer. And every lawyer knows that. That’s our job. The richer the client, the better. So you can die early – die early or retire early…it is perfectly all right for him to see anybody,” Duterte said.

He added that Carpio has been lawyering for tobacco firm Mighty Corp. “long before.”

In his television interview, Faeldon also said he would not show up in any future hearings of the Senate and the House of Representa­tives on issues involving corruption at the Bureau of Customs and the May 23 smuggling of P6.4-billion worth of shabu through the Manila internatio­nal container port.

“I would rather go to jail. I am questionin­g the constituti­onality of their investigat­ions. They have already judged and convicted us of receiving bribes. They have violated our basic rights, they have destroyed us,” Faeldon reasoned.

He said Surigao del Norte Rep. Robert Ace Barbers, who chairs the House committee on dangerous drugs, called for his resignatio­n even before his panel’s inquiry could start.

“Their investigat­ion is biased, they just wanted me out. That was the bottom line, and now I’m out,” Faeldon added.

Reached for comment, Barbers said, “I asked for his resignatio­n because of his incompeten­ce, to spare the President from further embarrassm­ent.”

Before Barbers launched his inquiry, Faeldon and his chief of staff Mandy Anderson incurred the ire of Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez for their rejection of his request for the promotion of a certain Customs officer Sandy Sacluti.

Anderson claimed that a staff of the Speaker told her Alvarez would “bring hell” to her and her boss. The Speaker denied making the threat.

At the Senate, Sen. Panfilo Lacson said Faeldon continues to display his ignorance of the law by questionin­g the legislativ­e immunity enjoyed by members of Congress.

In a statement, Lacson noted how Faeldon has repeatedly shown how he does not know what he is talking about when it comes to provisions of the law.

“This Faeldon never ceases to amuse me. After displaying ignorance of the provisions of the Tariff and Customs Code of the Philippine­s imposing zero tariff on cement importatio­n to the Philippine­s from another ASEAN country under AFTA, he is now calling for a review of the legislativ­e immunity granted to the senators and congressme­n, not understand­ing that it is a constituti­onal provision which says, ‘No Member shall be questioned nor be held liable in any other place for any speech or debate in the Congress or in any committee thereof’,” Lacson said.

Faeldon earlier dared Lacson to file a case against him in relation to his claims that he received P100 million as pasalubong or welcome gift when he entered the BOC and that he was on the take just like almost every other official and employee of the agency.

He also said that Lacson was hiding behind legislativ­e immunity by making his allegation­s at the halls of the Senate.

“I would like the correct institutio­n to review the limitation­s of privilege speeches. Because you are covering under the cloak of immunity. How many families will be destroyed, innocent families will be maligned?” Faeldon said.

Earlier, he responded to Lacson’s claims by saying the senator’s son Panfilo Lacson Jr. was involved in the smuggling of cement.

Meanwhile, Wilkins Villanueva, the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency chief for the National Capital Region, said he was invited to become the BOC Customs Intelligen­ce and Investigat­ion Service (CIIS) director.

Villanueva told The STAR that newly installed BOC Commission­er Isidro Lapeña, his former PDEA boss, invited him to take the post, replacing Niel Estrella whose unit bungled the seizure of the P6.4-billion shabu shipment.

If appointed, Villanueva, who earlier complained about the BOC’s mishandlin­g of the shipment, said he would plug the illegal drug problem at the ports and prevent its entry into the country.

He added he is willing to move to the BOC but noted that it would still depend on the President.

“During the Senate and congressio­nal inquiries, my perception on how the bulk of the illegal drugs enter the country changed. The PDEA and the Philippine National Police (PNP) have been chasing after these illegal drugs from the bottom, when the illegal drugs can be stopped from the top… So I am thinking that may be I could be of help (at the BOC),” said Villanueva, an anti-drugs advocate for 16 years.

The fight against illegal drugs was one of the main campaign slogans of Duterte when he ran for president last year.

Villanueva said that while his expertise is on illegal drugs, he is also experience­d in antiterror­ism and anti-kidnapping since he previously worked as an intelligen­ce officer of the National Anti-Kidnapping Task Force (Naktaf) for the entire Mindanao region.

“I think I was effective at the PDEA because of my background in intelligen­ce and investigat­ion. So wherever I will be assigned, it will be the same. It is just a matter of what will you focus on in your investigat­ion,” he said.

If he would be assigned to head the CIIS, Villanueva said he would not automatica­lly reshuffle his men. “In all of my assignment­s, I work with people that I have. I want them to prove their worth.” – With Evelyn Macairan, Marvin Sy

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