The Philippine Star

Jinggoy claims extortion try by ombudsman prober

- By ELIZABETH MARCELO

Former senator Jinggoy Estrada yesterday claimed that he too was a victim of the supposed corrupt practices in the Office of the Ombudsman.

In a chance interview with reporters, Estrada bared that a field investigat­or from the ombudsman attempted to extort money from him sometime in late 2013 when the anti-graft agency was still preparing the charges against him in connection with his alleged involvemen­t in the multibilli­on-peso pork barrel fund scam.

Estrada said the extortion attempt was in exchange for downgradin­g the plunder case that the ombudsman was then set to file against him to a lesser offense of graft.

He said the offer was coursed by the ombudsman investigat­or through an emissary.

“Not directly to me but through an emissary. They were asking for money from me but I did not give in because I know that my conscience is clear,” Estrada said.

Estrada, however, refused to identify either the graft investigat­or or the supposed emissary.

He refused to give the exact amount of money supposedly demanded by the investigat­or, but said it was not more than P1 million.

Estrada said the incident happened when the ombudsman was still at the early stage of its investigat­ion on the pork barrel fund scam in late 2013.

It was in June 2014 when the ombudsman formally filed one count of plunder and 11 counts of graft against Estrada before the Sandiganba­yan. He had been detained at Philippine National Police Custodial Center in Camp Crame, Quezon City since then.

Plunder is a non-bailable offense that carries a penalty of life imprisonme­nt, while graft is a non-bailable offense that carries the penalty of six up to 10 years of imprisonme­nt per count.

Just last month, Estrada was released from detention after the Sandiganba­yan Special Fifth Division granted his motion for bail on the ground that the prosecutio­n supposedly failed to present any evidence showing that he is the “main plunderer” in the case.

Estrada bared the alleged extortion attempt when asked by reporters to comment on President Duterte’s statement that corrupt practices are rampant in the ombudsman’s office.

Duterte, last week said he will create a commission that would investigat­e the ombudsman, especially its prosecutor­s and investigat­ors who are supposedly into dismissing cases in exchange for bribe money.

“Naniniwala ako dun sa sinabi niya (I be- lieve what the President said),” Estrada said.

He, however, is not inclined to participat­e in any fact-finding investigat­ion by the commission that Duterte intends to create.

Estrada further said he has no plan of pressing any charges against the supposed graft investigat­or who attempted to extort money from him.

“It’s useless. Noon talagang halos lahat ng tao, ni-brainwash ng nakaraang administra­syon na magnanakaw kami, kaya wala kaming kalaban-laban. Ngayon, unti unti nang lumalabas na pinili kami (Before, almost everyone was brainwashe­d by the previous administra­tion that we’re thieves and we were defenseles­s. Now, it’s slowly being revealed that we were just selected),” Estrada said.

Estrada said he did not report the incident to Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales due to the latter’s alleged bias against him and the other perceived enemies of the previous Aquino administra­tion.

“Eh si Ombudsman Morales parang one track mind yan eh, wala pang kaso prejudge na guilty na kami, paano ko susumbong sa

kanya? (Morales has a one-track mind. We were already prejudged as guilty even before the cases were filed. How can I report to her),” Estrada said.

Meanwhile, on the first day of the trial of Estrada’s plunder case yesterday, the prosecutio­n presented Mae Castillon, acting chief of the compliance section of the Bureau of Internal Revenue district office.

Castillon testified on Estrada’s submission of his income tax returns (ITRs) from 2007 to 2012.

The ITRs supposedly show that in those years, Estrada’s annual income tax payments ranged from P1 million to P5 million.

Office of the Special Prosecutor director Ma. Christina Marallag-Batacan said Estrada’s income tax payments “pale in comparison” to his declared wealth in those years which range from P83 million to P195 million based on his statement of assets, liabilitie­s and net worth (SALN).

Maria Lourdes Arbas, director of the Office of the Senate Secretary, was presented to testify on having custody of Estrada’s SALNs from 2004 to 2013 during his term as senator.

Batacan said the disparity between Estrada’s declared wealth and his tax payments would show “whether or not the income there in the SALN is a result of the kickbacks” he allegedly amassed from the alleged misuse of his Priority Developmen­t Assistance Fund (PDAF) or pork barrel.

Estrada is accused of amassing of P183 million worth of kickbacks by allocating portions of his PDAF to bogus non-government organizati­ons supposedly owned by businesswo­man Janet Lim-Napoles, the alleged brains behind the pork barrel scam.

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