The Philippine Star

Senate may summon Aguirre

- By PAOLO ROMERO

Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre II will have a lot of explaining to do in the dismissal of drug charges against selfconfes­sed drug dealer Kerwin Espinosa and 20 others, senators said yesterday.

Sen. Richard Gordon said it was surprising that Espinosa was cleared when he admitted to being a drug trafficker, apart from the evidence revealed at a Senate inquiry in 2016 into the Duterte administra­tion’s war on drugs.

“I condemn that to the highest level. I don’t know what entered their heads,” Gordon said, referring to the dismissal of the charges by prosecutor­s of the Department of Justice (DOJ). “Maybe Kerwin will be used as a state witness for some bigger cases, I don’t know.”

“Why are we waging a drug war if the cases against the big fish are dismissed? I don’t

know if the President is aware of it, he must be aware of it. And I don’t know if he has a bigger game plan,” he said.

Gordon advised Aguirre “to act like a lawyer” when reviewing the case, considerin­g the evidence against the drug lords was overwhelmi­ng.

Espinosa had detailed to the Senate his drug operations and absolved his father, the late Albuera mayor Rolando Espinosa, Gordon said.

The elder Espinosa was killed inside his jail cell in Baybay, Leyte by police officers out to serve a search warrant.

Senate Majority Leader Vicente Sotto III said he could not understand the DOJ’s dismissal, which he described as “bad for our prosecutio­n thrust against illegal drugs.”

Sen. Joseph Victor Ejercito lamented the DOJ was on a “clearing spree” and warned the resolution clearing Espinosa, Peter Lim and 20 other alleged drug lords could weaken the Duterte administra­tion’s campaign against illegal drugs.

Sen. Grace Poe said she was disturbed by the basis upon which the DOJ panel made its recommenda­tion to dismiss the drug charges against Espinosa and others.

“How a self-confessed drug lord like Kerwin Espinosa can be exonerated by the state is perplexing. It reflects the sloppiness of the police’s investigat­ion and case buildup against these drug lords,” Poe said.

Poe warned that once the decision is affirmed by Aguirre as justice secretary, “this would be an insult to the brave policemen who have died in legitimate anti-drug operations.”

A fake drug war

Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV said the dismissal was yet “another proof that what Duterte unleashed upon us is a fake drug war.”

“If you’re poor, you’ll be killed – no questions asked. When it comes to drug lords and a friend of Duterte, you’ll not only have due process, but also cleared of drug charges,” Trillanes said.

Trillanes cited the case of Sen. Leila de Lima, who was swiftly charged and detained based on what he called “scripted” and “conflictin­g” testimonie­s.

“Mr. Duterte, you’re duping our countrymen,” Trillanes said.

Sen. Paolo Benigno Aquino IV described the dismissal as a grave injustice for the thousands of victims of drugrelate­d extrajudic­ial killings.

“What’s the point of killing thousands of our countrymen if the sources of drugs are freed?” Aquino said.

Congressme­n also said the dismissal means that Duterte’s narco list “is inaccurate, unreliable and therefore useless for criminal prosecutio­n.”

Ifugao Rep. Teddy Baguilat said the dismissal weakened the drug-related cases against those named by Duterte.

Opposition Rep. Gary Alejano of Magdalo said the dismissal showed that many drug deaths were “arbitrary killings”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines