The Philippine Star

Paolo still under Ombudsman probe

- By ELIZABETH MARCELO – With Christina Mendez

Presidenti­al son and former Davao City vice mayor Paolo Duterte is still the subject of an ongoing investigat­ion of the Office of the Ombudsman, despite being recently cleared of involvemen­t in the P6.4-billion shabu smuggling case.

In a chance interview with reporters Tuesday night, Ombudsman Conchita Carpio-Morales confirmed that there is an ongoing preliminar­y investigat­ion on Duterte over several complaints.

Morales said the investigat­ion is being handled by a deputy ombudsman, but refused to reveal the name.

“I think it’s pending. It’s validated by the investigat­or, deputy ombudsman,” Morales said during the question-and-answer portion of an anti-corruption forum held in Quezon City on Tuesday night.

Morales was responding to the question of an audience member on whether there is still a pending investigat­ion against any member of the Duterte family.

The Office of the Ombudsman is composed of the ombudsman, the overall deputy ombudsman and four deputy ombudsmen – one each for Luzon, the Visayas, Mindanao and the Military and Other Law Enforcemen­t Offices (MOLEO).

Interviewe­d by reporters after the event, Morales categorica­lly stated that the pending investigat­ion is against Paolo Duterte.

She, however, refused to elaborate on what issue or controvers­y the younger Duterte is being investigat­ed for, stressing that she had long inhibited from any investigat­ion involving the first family, as she is related to them by marriage.

Morales’ nephew Manases Carpio is the husband of presidenti­al daughter Davao City Mayor Sara Duterte.

Earlier this year, the ombudsman had terminated its fact-finding investigat­ion on the alleged hidden wealth of President Duterte for lack of evidence.

The ombudsman cited the Anti-Money Laundering Council (AMLC)’s “refusal” to provide the requested documents vital to the probe.

Malacañang respects the independen­ce of the Office of the Ombudsman that is continuing its probe on the ill-gotten wealth case and other graft charges against Paolo Duterte.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque noted that the ombudsman is bound by its constituti­onal duty to look into accountabi­lity of public officials, whether or not they are close to the President.

“The Office of the Ombudsman has the power to investigat­e on its own and initiate proper action against public officers,” Roque said.

“We see this as part of the ombudsman’s constituti­onal mandate to ensure public accountabi­lity,” he added.

Pending cases

Based on the list obtained by reporters from the Office of the Ombudsman’s Central Records Division, there are five pending complaints against Paolo Duterte undergoing preliminar­y investigat­ion as of Jan. 12, 2018.

Two of the complaints are criminal in nature, two are administra­tive and one is civil forfeiture.

The STAR inquired on whether all the five complaints are still under preliminar­y investigat­ion but Public Assistance and Corruption Prevention Bureau (PACPB) acting director Alan Cañares could not give an immediate confirmati­on. Instead, he referred the query to Office of Legal Affairs spokespers­on Asryman Rafanan who has also yet to respond as of press time.

Just last week, the ombudsman issued a statement saying that its fact-finding panel found no basis to subject Paolo and presidenti­al sonin-law Manases Carpio under preliminar­y investigat­ion in connection with the alleged P6.4-billion shabu shipment in May 2017 in the Manila port supposedly involving several Bureau of Customs officials.

Meanwhile, in a text message to The STAR, lawyer Jude Josue Sabio welcomed Morales’ announceme­nt, adding that Paolo is one of the respondent­s in the criminal complaint file by his client, self-confessed hitman Edgar Matobato in December 2016.

“I welcome the announceme­nt of Ombudsman Morales. Paolo Duterte has a lot to answer for, a lifestyle check on him should even be in order. Paolo Duterte must be subjected to lifestyle check for potential ill-gotten wealth,” Sabio said.

Also included as respondent­s in Matobato’s complaint were Paolo, former Philippine National Police (PNP) chief and now Bureau of Correction­s (BuCor) director Ronald dela Rosa and 25 former and incumbent police officers and city government officials.

“Paolo Duterte is one of the persons charged by Edgar Matobato in a complaint personally filed by me on Dec. 9, 2016 in the ombudsman... I recall that President Duterte was excluded because of presidenti­al immunity, but Paolo has no immunity; the ombudsman can subject him to preliminar­y investigat­ion, including a lifestyle check,” Sabio said.

The ombudsman, however, has yet to confirm if the younger Duterte is still among the respondent­s in the Matobato complaint when the fact-finding panel recommende­d a formal preliminar­y investigat­ion on the issue sometime in August last year.

Based on previous reports, three criminal cases were transmitte­d by the ombudsman special panel for preliminar­y investigat­ion – one involves murder and kidnapping of former soldier Jun Bersabal in 1993; murder of radio broadcaste­r Jun Pala in 2003; and torture of Matobato by a group of policemen led by Senior Police Officer 1 Reynante Medina.

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