The Philippine Star

Palace unaware of plan to make Jinggoy state witness

- By ALEXIS ROMERO – With Michael Punongbaya­n

Malacañang is not aware of any plan to turn former senator Jinggoy Estrada into a state witness in the alleged anomalies involving the Disburseme­nt Accelerati­on Program (DAP) of the previous administra­tion.

“We don’t have any reports on that,” presidenti­al spokesman Ernesto Abella said when asked to react to the possibilit­y of Estrada becoming a state witness.

On Sunday, Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II told The STAR that Estrada could become a witness in the probe and possible filing of charges on the alleged irregulari­ties surroundin­g the DAP.

Aguirre said Estrada had claimed to have received P50 million in DAP funds supposedly to ensure that the late chief justice Renato Corona would be convicted during the impeachmen­t trial in 2012.

A fact-finding investigat­ion would be conducted to determine who may be liable for the irregulari­ties in the program, Aguirre added.

On Saturday, Estrada said nobody had talked to him about the possibilit­y of becoming a state witness in the DAP controvers­y.

He also expressed openness to become part of the Cabinet of President Duterte.

Abella said he is not aware if Estrada has been offered a Cabinet post.

Duterte mum on Estrada bail

Duterte also kept mum on the Sandiganba­yan’s decision to allow Estrada to post bail in the plunder case filed against Estrada for his alleged involvemen­t in the pork barrel fund scam.

“Ask the Sandigan. That’s not my territory,” the President said in an interview in Caloocan City Monday night.

Chief presidenti­al legal counsel Salvador Panelo said Duterte does not interfere with the work of other branches of government.

“The President has repeatedly said that he never meddled… He never called any department secretary on any matter,” Panelo told state-run Radyo Pilipinas.

“The same is true with Congress. He does not interfere,” he added.

Estrada is one of three senators implicated in the multibilli­on-peso pork barrel scam. He was accused of receiving P183 million in kickbacks from nonexisten­t projects. He was arrested and detained in Camp Crame in 2014.

On Friday, the Sandiganba­yan allowed Estrada to post a P1.33-million bail for his plunder and graft charges.

Three of five Sandiganba­yan associate justices voted to grant his request for temporary freedom while undergoing trial on grounds that the evidence against him is not strong.

Prosecutio­n to have bail grant reversed

Office of the Ombudsman Chief Prosecutor Edilberto Sandoval, a former presiding justice of the Sandiganba­yan, has vowed to exhaust all legal means to have the court’s decision granting bail to Estrada reversed, since the prosecutio­n only needs to convince one of three magistrate­s to reconsider.

“We are preparing a motion for reconsider­ation,” he told reporters yesterday.

Magistrate­s who voted in Estrada’s favor cited the Supreme Court’s decision in the plunder case of former president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in the alleged misuse of Philippine Charity Sweepstake­s Office funds where the SC junked the criminal case based on a demurrer to evidence. It also questioned the failure of the prosecutio­n to determine who the main plunderer is.

But Sandoval pointed out that since Estrada is accused of conspiring with alleged pork barrel scam mastermind Janet LimNapoles, it means they are both the main plunderers who should not be granted bail.

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