The Philippine Star

QCPD-PDEA shootout: Joint probe launched

- EMMANUEL TUPAS

The Philippine National Police (PNP) has launched a joint investigat­ion by its Board of Inquiry together with the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency as both the PDEA and the Quezon City Police District claimed a legitimate operation that ended in a shootout lasting more than an hour that left four dead – two QCPD members, one PDEA operative and an informant.

PNP chief Gen. Debold Sinas and PDEA director general Wilkins Villanueva vowed that those at fault would face the full force of the law.

“We can assure our people that there will be criminal and administra­tive charges to be filed against those individual­s found to have violated the laws, rules and regulation­s,” they said in a joint statement yesterday.

The Senate, House of Representa­tives and the National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI) are also separately

into Wednesday’s incident at a popular mall in Quezon City.

Based on the initial informatio­n gathered by investigat­ors, the PDEA Special Enforcemen­t Service (SES) and the Quezon City police District Special Operations Unit (DSOU) personnel had different targets as their respective coordinati­on forms showed.

Ten DSOU officers and seven from PDEA who were directly involved in the shootout were placed under restrictiv­e custody while the investigat­ion is ongoing.

Sinas said they also placed the policemen under restrictiv­e custody at the Criminal Investigat­ion and Detection Group, which was also tasked to probe the incident on the part of the PNP.

“They are collating the evidence and data. As of now, we could not see the entire picture of what really happened,” he added partly in Filipino, refusing to comment on a two-page coordinati­on form which showed the DSOU coordinate­d with PDEA a day before its actual operation.

He noted that it would be premature for them to release other informatio­n as it could only result in a misunderst­anding between the PDEA and PNP.

“We could not give our side because if we’d do that, it would only pit us against one another,” Sinas said in Filipino.

He identified the fatalities as Cpls. Lauro de Guzman and Galvin Eric Garado, whose remains were brought to their respective hometowns in Bulacan and Samar as requested by their families. One policeman and three PDEA members were also injured.

“Both of them (PDEA and DSOU) are thinking they are doing a legitimate operation that’s why the shootout lasted that long,” Villanueva said at a joint press briefing with the PNP at Camp Crame in Quezon City.

He dismissed insinuatio­ns that one side was doing a sell bust (selling prohibited narcotics to catch a suspect), stressing that the practice is illegal.

While Villanueva said it is too early to say that the law enforcers got played by drug rings, they are not discountin­g its possibilit­y, noting that the two agencies had different targets.

The investigat­ion, he added, should show how members of two law enforcemen­t agencies ended up in the same place and shooting at each other.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque Jr. said President Duterte is saddened by the shootout and “expressed both sadness and concern on why forces from the side of government were involved in the encounter.”

He added that the Chief Executive wants the incident probed to ensure that justice is given where it is due, adding that Duterte is banking on the results of the probe that will be handled by the Department of Justice through the NBI.

“We will go again to the bottom of this incident. There will be an impartial investigat­ion and justice will be done,” Roque said.

The Quezon City government in a statement urged the public not to spread false informatio­n on the shootout as it expressed support for the investigat­ions. “What happened was deplorable as it endangered the lives and safety of our citizens and disrupted the peace and commerce in the area,” it said.

Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra instructed the NBI to conduct an impartial parallel probe into the incident, one independen­t of the PNP and PDEA probe.

“This is separate and distinct from the probe to be conducted by an ad hoc joint PNP-PDEA board of inquiry earlier announced by PNP chief Debold Sinas,” he added.

Sen. Ronald dela Rosa said the Senate committee on public order which he chairs will conduct an inquiry in aid of legislatio­n and will invite those involved.

Dangerous drugs committee chair Rep. Ace Barbers also gave the same objective when he said the House will also conduct its probe.

Senate President Vicente Sotto III said the incident could have been prevented by unifying the four major programs – enforcemen­t, prosecutio­n, prevention and rehabilita­tion – into a single government agency.

He pointed out that since these four have to be in sync, a supervisor­y agency has to intervene in order to ensure that the concerned government agencies mandated to perform several duties under Republic Act 9165 are doing the same satisfacto­rily.

“All these, so we may achieve a drug-free Philippine­s for the future generation­s. There is no best time to cure this social ill than now. I, therefore urge my colleagues to support the passage of this important measure,” Sotto added.

The PDEA, according to Villanueva, will also comply with Duterte’s directive to create a team that will monitor law enforcemen­t officers who were dismissed from service for their nefarious activities.

Duterte ordered the formation of a special team that would monitor the erring personnel that he named last Wednesday, saying he would want to smash the hands of these personnel in his list if only to give them a lesson.

He claimed he hammered the hands of a number of erring government personnel since he was a mayor and that the hammer has become an effective tool in disciplini­ng a handful of them.

“Those that I have hammered, and (Defense Secretary) Delfin Lorenzana knows this when he was assigned in Davao, are true… all of them are now going straight,” the President said.

Duterte, who has been criticized for his bloody drug war, said he would remain unfazed if human rights groups would add the “hammering” on the list of his alleged crimes for violations of human rights.

He added that no illegal transactio­ns can be kept secret from the government, insinuatin­g that the long arm of the law will eventually catch the erring individual­s.

 ?? BOY SANTOS ?? Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency operatives sit at the parking lot along Commonweal­th Avenue following a shootout with Quezon City police officers on Wednesday night.
BOY SANTOS Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency operatives sit at the parking lot along Commonweal­th Avenue following a shootout with Quezon City police officers on Wednesday night.

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