The Philippine Star

DOJ to seek temporary HDO vs drug importers

- By EVELYN MACAIRAN – With Cecille Suerte Felipe, Romina Cabrera

The Department of Justice (DOJ) is planning to seek a precaution­ary hold departure order (PHDO) against the suspected drug importers who brought in P1.8 billion worth of shabu.

DOJ Acting Prosecutor General Richard Anthony Fadullon said they might ask the court to issue a PHDO against the 16 respondent­s led by Xu Zhijian alias Jacky Co, a suspected Chinese drug lord.

The Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA) filed the criminal complaint on Friday stemming from the illegal drug shipment seized at a warehouse in Malabon City.

Fadullon stressed securing an PHDO is necessary since one of the respondent­s, Xu, has already left the country.

“The fact that one of them is reportedly out of the country strengthen­s the possibilit­y these people will abscond, so justifiabl­e our request for a PHDO,” Fadullon said.

A PHDO is issued by a court against persons who are undergoing preliminar­y investigat­ion over complaints pending with the prosecutor. It is different from a hold departure order (HDO) which is issued only once charges have been filed in court.

Sen. Panfilo Lacson, in a privilege speech last Wednesday, revealed the details of the seizure of the drugs.

He said Xu was behind the importatio­n of 276,344.82 grams of shabu concealed inside tea products that were divided and placed inside 12 sacks.

The tea products were reportedly misdeclare­d to be plastic resin and imported from Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, with Wealth Lotus Empire Corp. as the alleged importer.

The contraband arrived in the country last March 17 at the Manila Internatio­nal Container Port and the shipment was discovered and confiscate­d by the authoritie­s on March 22.

Lacson had berated the Bureau of Immigratio­n (BI) for allowing Xu to leave the country despite his name allegedly being in the Interpol’s watchlist.

DOJ Secretary Menardo Guevarra said Friday that there was no HDO against Xu, thus he was allowed to leave the country.

Guevarra added Xu was not in the Interpol watchlist.

PDEA, for its part, defended their filing of a complaint, saying they were already prepared when Lacson made his revelation­s in a privilege speech.

PDEA spokesman Derrick Carreon said the filing of charges was agreed upon during a case conference on May 28, a day before Lacson delivered his speech.

Lacson has warned the PDEA and the Bureau of Customs (BOC) not to cover up the shabu shipment.

The senator claimed there was “controlled delivery” of the PDEA when it auctioned off the container containing the drugs.

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