The Philippine Star

House bill hit for presuming guilt of drug suspects

- – Cecille Suerte Felipe

Sen. Leila de Lima expressed her opposition to a House of Representa­tives bill providing legal presumptio­ns in drug-related offenses, which she said essentiall­y presumes the guilt of drug suspects.

While the intention of House Bill 7814 is generally good, De Lima said certain provisions in the proposed amendatory bill to the Comprehens­ive Dangerous Drugs Act are “patently offensive to the Bill of Rights.”

“If the laws are not just, the rule of law falls,” she said. “The bill creates presumptio­ns which, when uncontrove­rted, would allow the courts to convict the accused without the prosecutio­n having to present evidence.”

De Lima said that under the Constituti­on, it is the prosecutio­n’s job to “present evidence that an accused has committed a crime. It is not the accused who has to prove his innocence.”

Last March 2, lawmakers voted 188-11, with nine abstention­s, to approve HB 7814, which includes legal presumptio­ns on who are to be considered as importers, financiers, protectors or coddlers of illegal drugs, among others.

The proposed measure, intended to strengthen the Comprehens­ive Dangerous Drugs Act, was approved just days after the shootout between operatives of the Philippine National Police and the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency.

Citing a particular provision of the measure that she finds alarming, De Lima stressed that Section 3 states that “anyone spotted in the place where the sale, trading, marketing, dispensati­on, and delivery or distributi­on of drugs happen is presumed to be involved in these illegal operations unless proven otherwise.”

“Legal presumptio­ns are a means to expedite trials by shifting the burden of proof from complainan­t to defendant under situations in which the allegation­s appear to be likely correct. In this situation, the court makes an inference, given a set of facts, which the defendant is given the opportunit­y to refute by presenting evidence against it,” she said.

De Lima warned that the bill, if enacted, “will give the government a license to harass and imprison innocent people.”

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