The Philippine Star

Keng sees vindicatio­n in fight vs ‘irresponsi­ble’ media.

- By REY GALUPO – With Emmanuel Tupas

Businessma­n Wilfredo Keng yesterday thanked the Department of Justice for resolving to file cyber libel charges against online news website Rappler officers Maria Ressa and Reynaldo Santos and he is prepared for a lengthy legal process.

“While I am aware that this vindicatio­n is but the start of what may be a long and arduous process, I am committed to see this legal battle to the very end,” Keng said in a statement.

In its May 2012 article, Rappler identified Keng, who was supposedly linked to human traffickin­g and drug smuggling, as the owner of the black Chevrolet Suburban van allegedly used by former chief justice Renato Corona.

At that time, one of Keng’s companies had a pending case in a lower court, Rappler reported.

Keng refuted the story and charged the respondent­s with violation of Republic Act 10175 or Cybercrime Law.

Keng is the chairman, president and chief executive officer of Century Peak Metal Holdings Corp.

He was also the president of Colony Investors Inc., Good Earth Plaza, U-Need Shopping Center, Carriedo Plaza and Balikbayan Shopping Mall.

His business interests in China include Fil-China (Tianjin) Textile Inc., Colony Real Property Developmen­t (Weifang) Inc. and Wuzhou Long (Quanzhou) Automotive Mfg. Co. Ltd.

“Upon seeing the libelous article and prior to resorting to judicial remedies, I tried to formally and informally communicat­e with Rappler in order to have the said article taken down, clear my name and restore my reputation,” the statement reads.

He said Rappler repeatedly promised him, through formal and informal channels, that they will take down the article but the agency never did.

Keng said Rappler never attempted to obtain his side on the “crimes they wrongfully imputed to me or to fact-check their baseless attacks against me.”

He said he had secured clearance from the National Bureau of Investigat­ion certifying that he has never been investigat­ed, arrested, detained, indicted or convicted in connection with any crime.

He said if Ressa, Santos and Rappler would be left unaccounta­ble, the “example of immunity will be emulated and replicated and will destroy not just individual lives but our entire country.”

“This story is not just about an ordinary suit filed by a private and hardworkin­g citizen to clear his name. It is, in reality, a test case on the how the Philippine legal and judicial system will fare against the dangerous precedent that is being set by one reckless and irresponsi­ble member of the media and of the online community,” he added.

Meanwhile, police investigat­ors are allegedly verifying the reported involvemen­t of Keng in illegal drugs and other crimes.

Philippine National Police (PNP) spokesman Senior Supt. Bernard Banac said investigat­ors have no informatio­n on Keng’s alleged illegal activities.

Two ranking police officials handling anti-criminalit­y operations who refused to be identified, said yesterday that they also have not received any informatio­n that Keng is involved in any illegal activity.

“We have no informatio­n as of this time if he is in involved in drugs. We have to check our records,” the official said.

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