The Philippine Star

Sandigan urged: Punish Jinggoy

- – Elizabeth Marcelo

State prosecutor­s from the Office of the Ombudsman asked the Sandiganba­yan to order former senator Jinggoy Estrada to explain why he should not be cited in contempt for allegedly making false claims just to secure the court’s permission to travel to the United States later this month.

In a motion for reconsider­ation filed before the Sandiganba­yan Fifth Division on April 13, the ombudsman’s prosecutio­n panel asked the court to reconsider its earlier ruling allowing Estrada to stay in the US from April 30 to May 30.

The prosecutio­n also asked the court to order Estrada to explain why he should not be cited in contempt for allegedly using a falsified invitation letter in support of his travel motion.

In a hearing yesterday morning, Fifth Division chairman Associate Justice Rafael Lagos directed Estrada’s legal team to submit its comment on the prosecutio­n’s motion for reconsider­ation within three days. In a phone interview with

The STAR yesterday, Estrada maintained that the invitation letter he received from US Pinoys for Good Governance (USPGG) Michigan chapter head William Dechavez was not forged.

The Fifth Division had earlier granted Estrada’s motion for a one-month stay in the US for a vacation with his family, a medical checkup in connection with his “recurring” shoulder pains and to attend the event of the USPGG, a Filipino-American group.

Estrada attached in his motion an invitation letter signed by Dechavez.

However, in a press statement posted on its website a day after Estrada’s travel request was granted by the court, USPGG chairperso­n Filipino-American philanthro­pist Loida Nicolas Lewis and USPGG president Rodel Rodis denied issuing any invitation to the former senator.

Estrada is on trial for plunder and graft before the Fifth Division in connection with his alleged involvemen­t in the multibilli­on-peso pork barrel fund scam.

He was detained at the Philippine National Police Custodial Center in Camp Crame from June 2014 to September 2017, when the Fifth Division allowed him to post bail, citing lack of evidence showing he is the “main plunderer” in the case.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines