The Philippine Star

SC’s De Castro declines ombudsman nomination

- KRIZJOHN ROSALES

NEXT STOP, MISCHIEF REEF? Presidenti­al son Sebastian Duterte rides a jet ski with a Philippine flag in Casiguran Bay off Aurora during a send-off ceremony for a team conducting maritime science research at the Philippine Rise yesterday. The younger Duterte took the place of his father who, during the 2016 campaign, vowed to ride a jet ski to the Spratlys in the South China Sea, on the other side of the archipelag­o, and plant a Philippine flag there.

Associate Justice Teresita Leonardo-de Castro has de- clined her nomination for the ombudsman post to be vacated by Conchita Carpio-Morales in July.

In a one-page letter to the Judicial and Bar Council (JBC) yesterday, she opted not to accept the recommenda­tion of retired Associate Justice Arturo Brion.

“Although I am deeply moved by, and sincerely thankful for, Justice Brion’s kind endorsemen­t, I regret that I must decline his recommenda­tion as I wish to continue serving the Supreme Court until I reach the compulsory retirement age,” De Castro explained in the letter obtained by

She is set to retire from the Supreme Court (SC) this October.

De Castro also expressed hopes that the JBC would be successful in its search for worthy nominees.

House majority leader and Ilocos Norte Rep. Rodolfo Fariñas and Solicitor General Jose Calida also did not accept their respective nomination­s for the post.

At the end of the nomination and applicatio­n period yesterday, the candidates for the ombudsman position are Associate Justice Presbitero Velasco Jr., Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III, Special Prosecutor and former Sandiganba­yan Presiding Justice Edilberto Sandoval, Davao City regional trial court judges Carlos Espero II and Rowen Apao-Adlawan, President Duterte’s lawyer Edna Batacan and Duterte’s law school classmate Rex Rico.

Morales, 76, is also a retired SC justice who was appointed by former president Benigno Aquino III as ombudsman in 2011.

She replaced Merceditas Gutierrez, who resigned on May 6, 2011 to avoid an impeachmen­t trial at the Senate, leaving an unexpired term until Nov. 30, 2012.

In summer session last month, the SC dismissed petitions seeking to remove Morales from her post for alleged overstayin­g.

Justices voted unanimousl­y to dismiss the petitions filed last year by former Metro Rail Transit Line 3 (MRT-3) general manager Al Vitangcol and lawyer Rey Nathaniel Ifurung for lack of merit.

The high court found no basis in the prayer of petitioner­s to declare that the term of office of Morales had expired on Nov. 30, 2012.

It held that Article XI Section 11 of the Constituti­on, Sections 7 and 8(3) of Republic Act 6770 provide for a full term of seven years for the ombudsman.

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